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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Chaudhary, R (On the Application Of) v Bristol Crown Court & Anor [2014] EWHC 4096 (Admin) (04 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/4096.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4096 (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 :
MR JUSTICE NICOL
____________________
R (on the application of Mohammad Mumtaz Chaudhary) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Bristol Crown Court |
1st Defendant |
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(2) HMRC |
2nd Defendant |
____________________
Mr James Fletcher (instructed by HM Revenue and Customs) for the 2nd Defendant
Hearing dates: 29 July 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford:
The Facts
There may also be special procedure material acquired and/or created in the course of the trade such as business records, accounting records and accident reports held under similar undertakings and/or legal material in the form of general or pre/post litigation advice given by solicitors to clients regarding accidents held by ACHL. It is not intended to seize any of this material and the teams conducting the searches will be briefed accordingly.
HMRC recognises that no power of seizure conferred pursuant to this warrant is to be taken to authorise the seizure of an item which the officer exercising the power has reasonable grounds for believing to be subject to legal privilege.
The purpose of this communication is to address you regarding the scope and legality of the warrants executed by your officers on 8.9.2011. It is quite apparent that material outside the authority of the warrant has been seized. Additionally a large quantity of material which consists of legally privileged (LPP) material has been seized and remains in your possession.
The Grounds of Complaint
The judge erred when he concluded the court had no jurisdiction
The warrants were in breach of section 15(6) of the 1984 Act
The searches and seizures went beyond the purpose for which the warrants were issued
The relevant Statutory Provisions
Additional powers of seizure from premises
(1) Where—
(a) a person who is lawfully on any premises finds anything on those premises that he has reasonable grounds for believing may be or may contain something for which he is authorised to search on those premises,
(b) a power of seizure to which this section applies or the power conferred by subsection (2) would entitle him, if he found it, to seize whatever it is that he has grounds for believing that thing to be or to contain, and
(c) in all the circumstances, it is not reasonably practicable for it to be determined, on those premises—
(i) whether what he has found is something that he is entitled to seize, or
(ii) the extent to which what he has found contains something that he is entitled to seize,
that person's powers of seizure shall include power under this section to seize so much of what he has found as it is necessary to remove from the premises to enable that to be determined.
(2) Where—
(a) a person who is lawfully on any premises finds anything on those premises ("the seizable property") which he would be entitled to seize but for its being comprised in something else that he has (apart from this subsection) no power to seize,
(b) the power under which that person would have power to seize the seizable property is a power to which this section applies, and
(c) in all the circumstances it is not reasonably practicable for the seizable property to be separated, on those premises, from that in which it is comprised,
that person's powers of seizure shall include power under this section to seize both the seizable property and that from which it is not reasonably practicable to separate it.
(3) The factors to be taken into account in considering, for the purposes of this section, whether or not it is reasonably practicable on particular premises for something to be determined, or for something to be separated from something else, shall be confined to the following—
(a) how long it would take to carry out the determination or separation on those premises;
(b) the number of persons that would be required to carry out that determination or separation on those premises within a reasonable period;
(c) whether the determination or separation would (or would if carried out on those premises) involve damage to property;
(d) the apparatus or equipment that it would be necessary or appropriate to use for the carrying out of the determination or separation; and
(e) in the case of separation, whether the separation—
(i) would be likely, or
(ii) if carried out by the only means that are reasonably practicable on those premises, would be likely,
to prejudice the use of some or all of the separated seizable property for a purpose for which something seized under the power in question is capable of being used.
Application to the appropriate judicial authority
(1) This section applies where anything has been seized in exercise, or purported exercise, of a relevant power of seizure.
(2) Any person with a relevant interest in the seized property may apply to the appropriate judicial authority, on one or more of the grounds mentioned in subsection (3), for the return of the whole or a part of the seized property.
(3) Those grounds are—
(a) that there was no power to make the seizure;
(b) that the seized property is or contains an item subject to legal privilege that is not comprised in property falling within section 54(2);
[…]
(4) Subject to subsection (6), the appropriate judicial authority, on an application under subsection (2), shall—
(a) if satisfied as to any of the matters mentioned in subsection (3), order the return of so much of the seized property as is property in relation to which the authority is so satisfied; and
(b) to the extent that that authority is not so satisfied, dismiss the application.
(5) The appropriate judicial authority—
(a) on an application under subsection (2),
[…]
may give such directions as the authority thinks fit as to the examination, retention, separation or return of the whole or any part of the seized property.
(6) On any application under this section, the appropriate judicial authority may authorise the retention of any property which—
(a) has been seized in exercise, or purported exercise, of a relevant power of seizure, and
(b) would otherwise fall to be returned,
if that authority is satisfied that the retention of the property is justified on grounds falling within subsection (7).
(7) Those grounds are that (if the property were returned) it would immediately become appropriate—
(a) to issue, on the application of the person who is in possession of the property at the time of the application under this section, a warrant in pursuance of which, or of the exercise of which, it would be lawful to seize the property; or
(b) to make an order under—
(i) paragraph 4 of Schedule 1 to the 1984 Act,
[…]
under which the property would fall to be delivered up or produced to the person mentioned in paragraph (a).
Cases where duty to secure arises
(1) Where property has been seized in exercise, or purported exercise, of any power of seizure conferred by section 50 or 51, a duty to secure arises under section 61 in relation to the seized property if—
(a) a person entitled to do so makes an application under section 59 for the return of the property;
(b) in relation to England, Wales and Northern Ireland, at least one of the conditions set out in subsections (2) and (3) is satisfied;
(c) in relation to Scotland, the condition set out in subsection (2) is satisfied; and
(d) notice of the application is given to a relevant person.
(2) The first condition is that the application is made on the grounds that the seized property is or contains an item subject to legal privilege that is not comprised in property falling within section 54(2).
(3) The second condition is that—
(a) the seized property was seized by a person who had, or purported to have, power under this Part to seize it by virtue only of one or more of the powers specified in subsection (6); and
(b) the application—
(i) is made on the ground that the seized property is or contains something which does not fall within section 53(3); and
(ii) states that the seized property is or contains special procedure material or excluded material.
[…]
The duty to secure
(1) The duty to secure that arises under this section is a duty of the person for the time being having possession, in consequence of the seizure, of the seized property to secure that arrangements are in force that ensure that the seized property (without being returned) is not, at any time after the giving of the notice of the application under section 60(1), either—
(a) examined or copied, or
(b) put to any use to which its seizure would, apart from this subsection, entitle it to be put,
except with the consent of the applicant or in accordance with the directions of the appropriate judicial authority.
(2) Subsection (1) shall not have effect in relation to any time after the withdrawal of the application to which the notice relates.
(3) Nothing in any arrangements for the purposes of this section shall be taken to prevent the giving of a notice under section 49 of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (c. 23) (notices for the disclosure of material protected by encryption etc.) in respect of any information contained in the seized material; but subsection (1) of this section shall apply to anything disclosed for the purpose of complying with such a notice as it applies to the seized material in which the information in question is contained.
(4) Subsection (9) of section 59 shall apply in relation to any jurisdiction conferred on the appropriate judicial authority by this section as it applies in relation to the jurisdiction conferred by that section.
Power of justice of peace to authorise entry and search of premises
(1) If on an application made by a constable a justice of the peace is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing—
(a) that an indictable offence has been committed; and
(b)that there is material on premises mentioned in subsection (1A) below which is likely to be of substantial value (whether by itself or together with other material) to the investigation of the offence; and
(c) that the material is likely to be relevant evidence; and
(d) that it does not consist of or include items subject to legal privilege, excluded material or special procedure material; and
(e) that any of the conditions specified in subsection (3) below applies, he may issue a warrant authorising a constable to enter and search the premises in relation to each set of premises specified in the application.
[…]
(2) A constable may seize and retain anything for which a search has been authorised under subsection (1) above.
(3) The conditions mentioned in subsection (1)(e) above are—
(a) that it is not practicable to communicate with any person entitled to grant entry to the premises;
(b) that it is practicable to communicate with a person entitled to grant entry to the premises but it is not practicable to communicate with any person entitled to grant access to the evidence;
(c) that entry to the premises will not be granted unless a warrant is produced;
(d) that the purpose of a search may be frustrated or seriously prejudiced unless a constable arriving at the premises can secure immediate entry to them.
(4) In this Act "relevant evidence", in relation to an offence, means anything that would be admissible in evidence at a trial for the offence.
Search warrants—safeguards.
(1) This section and section 16 below have effect in relation to the issue to constables under any enactment, including an enactment contained in an Act passed after this Act, of warrants to enter and search premises; and an entry on or search of premises under a warrant is unlawful unless it complies with this section and section 16 below.
[…]
(6) A warrant—
[…]
(b) shall identify, so far as is practicable, the articles or persons to be sought.
A search under a warrant may only be a search to the extent required for the purpose for which the warrant was issued.
The Applicant's Submissions
Introduction
Section 15(6): the warrant shall identify, as far as practicable, the articles or persons to be sought
i. All business records, including sales and purchase invoices, accounting documents and any such material used or relied upon to administer and manage the business including communication devices.
ii. All personal/business bank accounts (UK and/or foreign), cheque books, records of debits, credits, payable orders and transfers and other records relating to accounts with any bank, building society or other financial institutions, that are believed to be linked to the offences under investigation.
iii. Computers, diskettes, other electronic storage media and mobile telephones.
iv. Any other items believed to be of an evidential value.
…"
28. I do not accept the submission made on behalf of HMRC that this warrant came anywhere near identifying the articles sought "so far as practicable". It is clear from the terms of the information provided to the Justices that it would have been a simple matter to specify the true scope of the material sought. The warrant was, in important respects, unlimited in its scope. It did not, so far as practicable, identify the articles which the information revealed were being sought. It is not suggested that the officers seized articles which offended the requirements of section 8(1) of the 1984 Act, but it is the claimant's case that the warrant under which they sought such articles was unlawful. In my judgment that case is established.
An order under this paragraph is an order that the person who appears to the circuit judge to be in possession of the material to which the application relates shall –
(a) produce it to a constable for him to take away; or
(b) give a constable access to it,
no later than the end of the period of seven days from the date of the order or the end of such longer period as the order may specify.
Cash, business records, private, financial and other records held in whatsoever form that may contain evidence of or relate to all sources of income, profits and gains received including correspondence and other documents of Mr Mohhammad Mumtaz Chaudhary, Mrs Zamzam Mumtaz Chaudhary, Miss Zoia Mumtaz Chaudhary, Mr Deepak Singh Hakimzada, Accident Claim Helpline Ltd and Triangle Vehicle Management Ltd and/or any form of evidence deemed relevant to the offences under investigation including documents and correspondence acquired or created by Accident Claim Helpline Ltd in the course of business or profession relating to accident and personal injury insurance claims management.
55. The wordings of the warrants must be read as a whole. Having regard to the description of the premises, the descriptions of the records and documents, the identity of the four persons to whom such records and documents might belong as well as the identity of the two limited companies, I consider that the objective bystander would be able to identify the articles being sought and be able to produce them.
A balance therefore has to be struck between compliance with the statutory requirements, which provide the protection for the property owner, and the state of knowledge of those carrying out an investigation into suspected and fraudulent activities. [54]
Did the judge have jurisdiction to determine whether the warrants were in breach of section 15(6) of the 1984 Act?
37. Parliament's object in conferring the section 59 power on the Crown Court was to provide a speedy and relatively cheap means to challenge the exercise of the relevant powers of seizure and to seek the return of property seized. On any basis, the Crown Court has power to determine whether the requirements of a lawful seizure other than the validity of a search warrant have been satisfied (for example, whether it was reasonably practicable to determine at the time of the search whether what had been found was evidence of a crime), including, in the case of an entry to premises without a warrant, whether that entry (which may have been made in order to effect an arrest rather than to effect a search) was lawful. The effect of the Council's submission is that where a warrant has been issued, the lawfulness of its issue is the only issue that the Crown Court cannot address. If this is right, there is an unfortunate division of jurisdiction: in cases in which there is a challenge to a relevant warrant, the claimant must bring proceedings for judicial review in the Administrative Court to quash the warrant; in all other cases the Crown Court has complete jurisdiction.
45. It is conceded on behalf of the Chief Constable that each of the warrants was defective on the first ground (viz. neither warrant named the officer who made the application). It is further conceded that the effect of section 15(1) is to render the entries onto property and the searches unlawful. In the circumstances of the present case, however, it is submitted on behalf of the Chief Constable that the breach was technical only. The claimant was himself present at the search which took place in his own home. He would have had no difficulty, if it was relevant, in discovering the identity of the officer who made the application. No prejudice has resulted to the claimant from the fact that the officer was not named in either warrant. I accept these submissions. Section 15(1) in its terms operates to render interference with the claimant's property under the authority of the warrant unlawful but it does not render the warrant itself unlawful. The claimant is seeking discretionary relief from the court. It is most improbable, in my view, that on this ground a court would make an order quashing the warrant after its execution.
[…]
Conclusion
48. In my judgment the only ground of challenge to these warrants which has legal merit is the omission of DI Kennedy's name as the applicant on the face of the warrants. It is my view that the breach of section 15(6)(a) was so technical that in the circumstances of the present case there is no prospect that the court would use its discretionary powers either to quash the warrants or to make a declaration of invalidity. Having regard to the exceptional period of delay before these proceedings were issued and the prejudice which inevitably results to good administration I would refuse permission to proceed to review.
(8) Mr Downes (counsel for the claimant in that case) submitted that where a warrant is granted it should be upon the basis that the party affected by it can go to the District Judge, after it has been executed and after the property has been secured, to invite the District Judge to re-consider his decision to grant the warrant either at all or in that form. No one suggested that a District Judge has any statutory jurisdiction to reconsider his decision to grant an application for a warrant after the warrant has been executed, and I am not persuaded of the existence of any inherent jurisdiction to that effect. Whether such a jurisdiction should now be granted to a District Judge by statute is a matter for Parliament not for this court. There are plainly arguments in favour of a further hearing at that level rather than by seeking relief in the High court.
(9) The remedy which is available to a person or persons affected by a warrant is to seek judicial review. It is an adequate remedy because the statutory provisions have to be read in the light of those Articles of the European Convention which are now part of English law. In fact, as was said by Lord Woolf CJ in the Kent Pharmaceuticals case [2002] EWHC 3023 (Admin) if the statutory provisions are satisfied the requirements of Article 8 of the Convention will also be satisfied, and at least since the implementation of the Human Rights Act an application for judicial review is not bound to fail if, for example, the applicant cannot show that the Director's decision to seek a warrant in a particular form was irrational, but in deciding whether to grant permission to apply for judicial review the High Court will always bear in mind that the seizure of documents pursuant to a warrant is an investigative step, perhaps best reconsidered either at or even after the trial.
The searches and seizures went beyond the purpose for which the warrants were issued
[…] if in respect of any warrant there has been a breach of section 16(8) […] the entry, search and seizure under that warrant were unlawful. (page 574 F)
Subject to the de minimis principle, which common sense requires, I conclude that a search has exceeded the purpose for which the warrant was issued – namely the search for and seizure of material covered by the warrant in respect of which the criteria already referred to have been satisfied – when material which does not satisfy those criteria has been seized. (page 575 G)
65. […] However I have no doubt that in the exercise of the judicial discretion conferred by Section 59(6) any court or other appropriate judicial authority faced with an application for retention of unlawfully seized property will be astute to subject to the most rigorous examination the circumstances leading up to and surrounding the illegality of the initial seizure. Any suggestion of bad faith or even that the police or other agency adopted a less than rigorous and scrupulous approach to the drawing up and the execution of the initial warrant is likely to weigh heavily against the exercise of the discretion in favour of authorising retention.
The Respondent's Submissions
Section 15(6): jurisdiction
50. […] Challenges to the validity of a warrant to search and seize property were, before the 2001 Act, made and continue to be made in the Administrative Court and not in the Crown Court. The issue is whether section 59(3)(a) handed to the Crown Court the jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the lawfulness of the issue of a warrant. A warrant issued by a magistrate under section 8 Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 or by a judge under section 9 of the 1984 Act is valid unless and until it is quashed. The House of Lords held in McGrath v Chief Constable of the Royal Ulster Constabulary [2001] UK HL 39, [2001] 3 WLR 312 that a warrant for the arrest of a person is valid until set aside. […]
51. The issue of a warrant is a judicial act. It would be a novel and surprising development of the law if a court of equal jurisdiction enjoyed the power to declare invalid the judicial act of another. Stanley Burnton LJ expressed the view, obiter, in Dulai at paragraph 39 that the Crown Court did not have jurisdiction to examine the circumstances of the issue of a warrant by a magistrates court. With respect, I agree. It seems to me that the ground of challenge to seizure provided by section 59(3)(a) does not enable the applicant to challenge the validity of the warrant in the Crown Court. The challenge under section 59(3)(a) is not, in any event, limited to occasions when property has been seized in execution of a warrant. Section 19(1) of the 1984 Act gives limited power to a constable to seize certain property if he is "lawfully on any premises". Section 18 enables a constable to search for evidence upon the premises of a person who has been arrested for an indictable offence. In my judgment, the term "there was no power to make the seizure" describes either a seizure in excess of a statutory power of search or a seizure in excess of the power of search given by a warrant. It does not describe a seizure made under a warrant issued with judicial authority which might subsequently be quashed or declared unlawful by the Administrative Court in proceedings for judicial review of the power exercised by the Magistrates Court or the Crown Court. Should the warrant subsequently be declared invalid, the Administrative Court may in the exercise of its discretionary powers order the return of the property seized, but when considering such an order it will no doubt have in mind that if property is retained as evidence in forthcoming criminal proceedings the Magistrates Court or the Crown Court can in appropriate cases use its discretion to exclude evidence improperly obtained; also, that the property would, if returned, immediately be the subject of a fresh application for a warrant or an order for production under paragraph 4 of schedule 1 (as to which see section 59(6) and (7) ).
25. The limitations of the consequences of any quashing order should be noted. Unlike the consequences of non compliance with section 15 or 16 which are provided for by the express terms of section 15(1), the quashing of any warrant cannot render unlawful any prior entry or search or seizure in reliance upon the authority of the warrant, to found, for example, a civil claim for damages for trespass. At most it would render continuing possession of anything seized unlawful. It is well established that a warrant issued by a magistrate under section 8 (as with any warrant purportedly issued in exercise of an existing statutory power) is valid unless and until it is quashed. Until quashed, it remains a lawful authority and justification for any entry or seizure if such is in accordance with its terms. See Goode para 52; McGrath v Chief Constable of the Royal Ulster Constabulary [2001] UK HL 39, [2001] 3 WLR 31.
Section 15(6): merits
Having regard to the description of the premises, the descriptions of the records and documents, the identity of the four persons to whom such records and documents might belong as well as the identity of the two limited companies, I consider that the objective bystander would be able to identify the articles sought and be able to produce them.
Section 16(8)
66. This ground is another challenge to the legality of the search and seizure; I have already concluded that it is not open to me to adjudicate on this point.
67. However I am able to make these observations having heard argument and evidence about the search and seizures that took place.
68. I accept the evidence given by HMRC employees who planned and took part in the execution of the search warrants. I have borne in mind that when they gave their oral evidence they were being asked about events that occurred more than two years ago.
69. In respect of the practicalities of the search, I was impressed by the oral evidence of Mr Moorcroft and Mr Lane; they were acting in good faith – their integrity has not been challenged – and [they] were aware of the issue of LPP. They and their colleagues were faced with vast amounts of materials including personal files and they knew and understood their powers under section 50.
70. This ground relates to the seizure of items containing LLP material. HMRC accept that firstly in planning Operation Sorus, it was likely to face claims of LPP at some of the locations – see page 10 of the briefing document, secondly LLP material was identified and/or considered to be identified during the course of the searches and thirdly LPP material was seized and removed from the locations.
71. Mr Jones contends that vast quantities of LPP material have been seized in the approximately 35,000 files that were sized when the warrants were executed. This is described in the evidence of Mr Ullah (p227).
72. While there is a dispute about the quantities of such material, the Respondent does not argue with the general proposition, as required by section 53 and upon an application made under section 59, for LPP material to be secured and returned. Mr Davies made this position clear during the course of his oral evidence.
73. I accept that HMRC never set out to seize LPP material; the documents covered by LPP in a claim file were of no interest to HMRC in terms of its investigations into fraud.
74. I am in no doubt that both parties are capable of resolving the issue of the return of any LPP material; they have both expressed the wish to do.
LP material
9. I turn now to consider relevant material which is or maybe subject to LP, as qualified by section 10(2). Here the position is, as it seems to me, relatively straight forward. Section 8(2) entitles a constable to seize material which is within the scope of a properly drawn warrant which has been properly obtained unless he has reasonable grounds for believing the item in question to be subject to LP. Whether or not he has such grounds at the time of seizure must be a question of fact, to be decided in the context of any given case. Obviously it will help to avoid difficulties later if agreement can be reached at the time of the search as to what is and what is not subject to LP. If that is not possible the constable who is conducting the search would be wise to package separately for later examination items which are relevant, but which he believes may be subject to LP. If his state of mind is such that he believes the items to be subject to LP then he must not seize them - Section 19(6) - but a constable is not bound to accept at face value a claim to LP, whether it is raised by an owner or by an owner's lawyer. In some rare cases, for example when a search is being made of the office of a lawyer who is not himself suspected of any criminality, if LP is claimed the constable may have reasonable grounds for accepting the claim without further enquiry, but in almost any other case the constable will have to examine the item to some extent to test the claim, and of course if no claim is made the constable will have to examine the item before he can possibly have reasonable grounds for believing it to be subject to LP. If as a result of later examination after seizure, or perhaps as a result of legal advice, a constable obtains reasonable grounds for believing an item to be subject to LP he must return the item forthwith without further examination, but his seizure of it will not have been illegal because at the time of seizure he had no reasonable grounds for believing the item to be subject to LP. This is where, with respect, like the Divisional Court in Popely 4th October 1999 unreported, I venture to differ from the decision in Gross, where it was said at page 23B that "removal of legally privileged material from the premises which are the subject of the warrant is not permitted". In that case the warrant was obtained under section 9 Schedule I to the 1984 Act, but nothing seems to turn on that.
That leaves the problem of what is to be done if a difference of opinion persists as to whether an item seized was relevant (i.e. within the warrant) or was subject to LP (as qualified by section 10(2)) and, if so, whether at the time of seizure the constable had reasonable grounds for believing the item be subject to LP. In my judgment as the law stands those issues can only be ventilated by means of an action for trespass to goods, or perhaps in some cases by means of proceedings for judicial review. The latter course is not usually satisfactory, and either course may tend to slow up a criminal investigation which should be proceeding as quickly as possible. So there would seem to be a need for a special inter partes procedure to bring the matter speedily before a circuit judge. Protocols of the type shown to us in draft could have a valuable role to play, not least in preserving the material in a suitable state until it has been adjudicated upon, but in the end they cannot provide a quick solution where there is a dispute
.
Effect of Exceeding Powers
10. If an item is taken which falls outside the scope of the warrant, or which the constable executing the warrant has reasonable grounds for believing to be subject to legal privilege, what is the result? In R v Southwark Crown Court ex parte Sorsky Defries 6th July 1995 unreported, it was said, at page 17F of the transcript, that any transgression renders the search unlawful "and the seizure of the documents actually covered by the warrant unlawful as well". The only authority offered for that proposition seems to be section 16(8) of the Act — the provision which requires that search only be a search to the extent required for the purpose for which the warrant is issued. The same line of reasoning seems to have been used by this court in R v Chief Constable of Warwickshire ex parte Fitzpatrick (1988) 1 All E R 65 at 76, but in my judgment section 16(8) is irrelevant. It only confines the area of search. It has nothing to do with seizure and the fact that something has been seized which should have been left behind does not necessarily mean that the search was too extensive. I accept, of course, that any failure to comply with the requirements of either section 15 or section 16 renders the whole process of entry and search unlawful - see section 15(1) - but in any normal case it seems to me that if documents are seized only some of which should have been seized—
(1) the search remains valid for those documents within the scope of the warrant, but—
(2) documents which should not have been seized must be returned and there may be a liability in damages arising out of their seizure. (emphasis added)
Discussion
Did the judge have jurisdiction to determine whether the warrants were in breach of section 15(6) of the 1984 Act?
35. Finally, I consider that the judge was right in any event to take the view that the proper avenue for challenge to the validity of the warrant was by way of proceedings for judicial review and that, as the judge held, Mr Bell's failure to appeal against the striking out of his claim that the warrant had been maliciously applied for, put paid to his efforts to attack the validity of the warrant before the judge.
45. In my judgment the submissions of Mr Fletcher must succeed and I conclude that the Crown Court has no jurisdiction to consider the lawfulness and validity of the warrants issued by Judge Hagen on 8.9.2011. In reaching that conclusion I have had particular regard to the guidance of Pitchford LJ in Goode.
Section 15(6): the warrant shall identify, as far as practicable, the articles or persons to be sought
The searches and seizures went beyond the purpose for which the warrants were issued
Costs
Mr Justice Nicol