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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Michli, R (On the Application Of) v Westminster Magistrates Court [2024] EWHC 559 (Admin) (12 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/559.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 559 (Admin) |
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previously CO/10/2023 |
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GRIFFITHS
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THE KING on the application of ANDREAS MICHLI |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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WESTMINSTER MAGISTRATES COURT | Defendant |
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-and- |
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CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE |
Interested Party |
____________________
Paul Jarvis (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Interested Party
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 7 March 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean and Mr Justice Griffiths:
Relevant facts and procedural history
The law
127 Limitation of time.
(1) Except as otherwise expressly provided by any enactment (…), a magistrates' court shall not try an information or hear a complaint unless the information was laid, or the complaint made, within 6 months from the time when the offence was committed, or the matter of complaint arose."
"64A Time limits for prosecutions
(1) Notwithstanding anything in section 127(1) of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1980, a magistrates' court may try an information (or written charge) relating to an offence created by or under this Act if the information is laid (or the charge is issued) —
(a) before the end of the period of 3 years beginning with the date of the commission of the offence, and
(b) before the end of the period of 6 months beginning with the date on which evidence which the prosecutor thinks is sufficient to justify the proceedings comes to the prosecutor's knowledge."
"It is an unusual time limit provision in that it extends the time limit for prosecution potentially well beyond the usual 6 months set out in the Magistrates' Court Act 1980. It creates a first alternative, a long stop time limit of 3 years, and a second alternative, 6 months beginning with the date on which evidence which the prosecutor thinks is sufficient to justify the proceedings comes to his knowledge. If the prosecution do nothing at all for more than 2 years, then stir themselves and issue summonses within 5 months of evidence coming to their knowledge, then they would be within the time limit set out in section 31(1) .
What the section does show is that Parliament expected the consideration of a prosecution under this section to be the subject of a careful decision. The decision which the prosecutor has to make under this subsection is not whether there is a prima facie case but whether the evidence is sufficient to justify a prosecution."
"For the purposes of this appeal, an understanding of the nature of the decision which the prosecutor is required to make under section 31(1)(b), as set out by Bean LJ in that passage, is crucial: the relevant date is the date upon which the prosecutor considers that, upon the available evidence, it is in the public interest to prosecute the particular individual or individuals. That decision needs to be made with especial care; and it cannot be avoided or delayed by – to use the phrase of Pill LJ in RSPCA v Johnson [2009] EWHC 2702 (Admin) at [33]) – the mere "shuffling of papers", or by information being sat on so as to extend the time limit. So far as substance is concerned, it demands, not merely consideration of whether there is a prima facie case, but whether it is in the public interest for such a prosecution to be brought. That requires consideration of, and often investigation into, factors which bear upon that issue, for which a prosecutor is entitled to reasonable time, even after the primary evidence has been gathered in, and even after the prosecutor has decided that there is or may be a prima facie criminal case against someone or even identified individuals. That remains good law, the relevant passages from both Johnson and Letherbarrow being recently endorsed by Gross LJ (with whom Andrews J agreed) in Riley v Crown Prosecution Service [2016] EWHC 2531 (Admin), [2017] 1 WLR 505 at [17]."
"Fixed penalty notices
(1) An authorised person may issue a fixed penalty notice to any person that the authorised person reasonably believes—
(a) has committed an offence under these Regulations, and
(b) is (in the case of an individual) aged 18 or over.
(2) A fixed penalty notice is a notice offering the person to whom it is issued the opportunity of discharging any liability to conviction for the offence by payment of a fixed penalty to an authority specified in the notice.
(…)
(4) Where a person is issued with a notice under this regulation in respect of an offence—
(a) no proceedings may be taken for the offence before the end of the period of 28 days following the date of the notice;
(b) the person may not be convicted of the offence if the person pays the fixed penalty before the end of that period."
The arguments
"…the start point for police prosecutions is the end of the fixed penalty period (28 days) if a fixed penalty was offered. That is because the prosecutor has six months from the time when "sufficient evidence to justify proceedings" came to their knowledge, and until the fixed penalty period has expired, they will not have sufficient evidence to justify proceedings, as they can't prosecute at all."
"In my view, the written charge can be regarded as issued only when the document comprising the written charge is completed, with all relevant details and in the form needed for service. Provided that is done within six months of the relevant offence, the written charge will have been issued in time."
"12. In any event these offences have an extended time limit. I accepted that the standard time limit in s.127 MCA 1980 for summary offences from commencing prosecutions of 6 months applies. However, s.64A(1)(b) of the Public Health Act1984 provides an extended time limit. A prosecution may commence within 6 months of "sufficient evidence to justify proceedings coming to the prosecutor's knowledge", provided the charge is issued no more than 3 years from the offence. A certificate from the prosecutor of when they obtained that knowledge is determinative.
13. The time does not start to run for the extended time limit until the time to pay has expired. That is because before that point "sufficient evidence to justify proceedings" could never arise, since the prosecution is barred until the time limit has expired. (The test is not "sufficient evidence of the offence".)
14. The charge was therefore laid in time."
"There was (…) no evidence put forward by the Crown proving that the charge had been authorised/issued within the relevant time (it was not an issue identified at that time). The defence reiterated to the Judge that it was for the prosecution to prove that this was the case and a lack of evidence supplied means they had failed that test.
(…) The written charge was in fact issued on 20 August and not 11 August as indicated.
(…) In reference to the statement of District Judge Snow, I was the advocate in Court who acted on behalf of Mr Michli. At no point did I concede that the written charge had been issued on 11 August 2021. The entire submission was based on the charge being issued on 20 August and that there was no agreement that the charge was issued on 11 August nor any resolution of that issue. The argument put forward was the prosecution had to prove that the charge was issued on the 11 August, and nothing was forthcoming as the issuance was after the statute limitation, the 20/08/2021.
(…) the District Judge did not address the submissions put forward by the defence. He stated that it was irrelevant on the basis that the six month statutory time limit began at the earliest of the 14th March 2021 as a default position but that his finding was that the statutory time limit didn't expire until 23/11/2021 and therefore the summons was issued within the relevant time."
"…if on evidence of whatever nature before the court, magistrates doubt the date of the information, such that it could have been laid outside the time limit, they are entitled to, and should decline, jurisdiction. It is a matter of fact for their determination in accordance with the ordinary criminal burden and standard of proof."
Discussion and decision
Ground 2
Ground 1
Conclusion