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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) v Manchester And Salford Magistrates' Court [2017] EWHC 3719 (Admin) (07 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/3719.html Cite as: [2019] WLR 2617, [2019] 1 WLR 2617, [2017] EWHC 3719 (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 :
(SIR BRIAN LEVESON)
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY
____________________
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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MANCHESTER AND SALFORD MAGISTRATES' COURT |
Defendant |
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- and – |
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JOHN BLAKELEY |
Interested Party |
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And between: |
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DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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MANCHESTER AND SALFORD MAGISTRATES COURT |
Defendant |
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- and – |
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JOSHUA WHYTE |
Interested Parties |
____________________
Jeremy Benson Q.C. (instructed by Geoffrey Miller, Manchester) for the Interested Parties
Hearing date: 27 June 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Brian Leveson P:
"If material does not weaken the prosecution case or strengthen that of the defendant, there is no requirement to disclose it. For this purpose the parties respective cases should not be restrictively analysed. But they must be carefully analysed, to ascertain the specific facts on which the charges are resisted. The trial process is not well served if the defence are permitted to make general and unspecified allegations and then seek far-reaching disclosure in the hope that material may turn up to make them good. Neutral material or material damaging to the defendant need not be disclosed and should not be brought to the attention of the court."
Jurisdiction
"The obligation of this Court is to keep out of the way until the magistrate has finished his determination seems to me to be a principle properly to be applied both to summary trial and to committal proceedings."
"The proper course is to proceed to the end of the trial in the lower court and then to test the matter, almost certainly by way of case stated."
"I accept that this is the normal rule, but in this, as in some other cases, the prosecution would no doubt say at that conclusion of a trial resulting in a conviction that it was too late for the claimant to complain about an adjournment that should not have been granted before. In a case such as this, where the issue is straightforward and the principle clear, I do not see that there is any fetter on this court intervening."
"It needs to be said, it seems to me, that the general rule as set out in Buck is important. It is necessary in nearly every case to wait until the end result of the trial in the Magistrates' Court is known before anybody can say whether there is a source for complaint or not. That was the position in Hoar-Stevens because other decisions - for example, that under Section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act - might yet remove any reason for complaint at all. Quite apart from that, it is necessary in nearly every case to wait until the end of the case so that the magistrates can find the facts and they can properly be known for the purposes of decision here. It is for that reason that it is the procedure by way of case stated which is, in nearly every case, the correct manner in which to challenge a decision in the Magistrates' Court. Otherwise the facts may be the subject of dispute in this court."
The facts: Mr Whyte
"1. A complete MG6C which particularises all material that may be relevant to the investigation
2. Details of the previous and post checks and calibrations used for the "roadside breath test" prior to the 3rd September 2016
3. Details of the results of the calibration checks of the "roadside breath test" prior to the 3rd September 2016
4. A copy of the printout from the download which may contain information for that 35 day period around the 3rd September 2016 on the "roadside breath test".
5. Disclosure of the download of the memory showing the subject test; and the tests 6 months before and 6 months after 3rd September 2016 on the Intoxilyzer.
6. The metrological log – and details of the 299 tests on the download memory of the Intoxilyzer.
7. Relevant certificates of calibration from the Intoxilyzer and gas cylinder before and after Mr Whyte's breath procedure.
8. Any engineers reports from seven months either side of Mr Whyte's breath test from the Intoxilyzer.
9. Certificates of the check gas used in the test at the police station.
10. Copies of service certificates of the Intoxilyzer 6000UK number A0358 before and after 3rd September 2016 plus the engineer reports for the same period.
11. A report from the roadside device if it exists.
12. All relevant pocket notebooks not previously disclosed.
13. Any pre-release breath test printouts or confirmation they do not exist."
The application explained in general terms that the prosecutor was thought to have that material because the "metrological log book" had to be kept with the device, and would record the results of service and repair. As the device had to be calibrated, the calibration certificates had to exist in order for it to retain its type approval.
The further evidence
"F.1 Purging and Blank Checks
Before the Intoxilyzer can analyse a person's breath or carry out a calibration check it is a Home Office requirement that is it clear of alcohol from any previous usage, and that it is therefore reading 0µg/100ml as a baseline. To ensure that this is the case the instrument purges itself by drawing in room air through the breath tube and mouthpiece: it then checks that the background reading is 0.6µg/100ml or lower. If during this purging process the 6000 is unable to score a reading of 0.6 or lower then the message Ambient Fail is shown on the display and printout, and the test procedure automatically terminates at that point. This same purging and air blank checking routine of each specimen of breath or standard alcohol vapour is quite unaffected by the alcohol in whatever specimen the instrument may previously have received and analysed.
F.2 Calibration Checks
This calibration check procedure is carried out before AND after the subject provides his or her two breath specimens, to ensure that these are each analysed accurately for their alcohol content. It is conducted using an alcohol vapour/air mixture of known concentration, nominally 35µ/100ml, held in a cylinder that is attached to the side of the instrument. This mixture is passed into the Intoxilyzer instrument automatically, and the reading obtained must lie within the defined range 32-37µg/100ml inclusive. In fact the range is actually 32.0-37.9, but because the measured readings are always truncated before reporting, they appear as 32-37µg/100ml on the display and printout.
Provided, therefore, the two calibration checks shown on any printout [under Simulator Check 1 and Simulator Check 2] are within the range 32-37µg/100ml inclusive, this is proof that the said instrument was analysing breath alcohol to the required limits of accuracy [as defined by the Home Office] at the relevant time."
Later he added:
"I reiterate … – the lion intoxilyzer® 6000UK printout relating to WHYTE's evidential breath analysis [Test Number: JJ/10668/16] shows that the two calibration check readings [Simulator Check 1 and Simulator Check 2] were 35 and 34µg/100ml [as I have stated at Section F.2 the allowable range is 32-37µg/100ml] and all four Blank readings were 0µg/100ml. There are no error messages and the two reported breath alcohol readings are within 15% of each other."
He concluded that there was "simply no direct evidence that [the device used for Mr Whyte] was unreliable when the defendant blew into it… the print out was remarkably unremarkable." He was critical of Dr Mundy's absence of reference to the print out, which showed no error, or to its significance.
"The requirement of the Home Office for Type Approval was [and still is] that an instrument can only issue an evidential breath analysis record if, as a result of the various required checks that it goes through as a part of each breath analysis procedure [see Sections F1 and F2], it is shown to be operating correctly and accurately when the subject provided their two breath specimens into it. The printout stands alone: it is the apex to the pyramid. All other the documents (sic) [the building blocks of the pyramid], are enabling documents. If those processes had not been completed correctly, and on time, then there would be no printout: that is a pre-requisite to Type Approval."
The first issue: The statutory and Code provisions
"(3) For the purposes of this section prosecution material is material—
(a) which is in the prosecutor's possession and came into his possession in connection with the case for the prosecution against the accused,
(b) which, in pursuance of a code operative under Part II, he has inspected in connection with the case for the prosecution against the accused, or
(c) which falls within subsection (4).
(4) Material falls within this subsection if in pursuance of a code operative under Part II the prosecutor must, if he asks for the material, be given a copy of it or be allowed to inspect it in connection with the case for the prosecution against the accused."
Could the District Judge rationally conclude on the evidence that these materials were reasonably capable of undermining the prosecution or advancing the defence cases?
Conclusion