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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Davenport & Ors, R. v [2005] EWHC 2828 (QB) (08 December 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2005/2828.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2828 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand. London. WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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CHRISTINE DAVENPORT IAIN CATER DIENO GEORGE PAUL SANDERS BRIAN RUANE COLIN WILSON |
Respondents |
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Mr Edmund Lawson QC & Mark Bryant Heron (instructed by) Herbert Smith Solicitors for Iain Douglas Charles Cater
Mr Timothy Langdale QC & Ian Winter (instructed by)BCL Burton Copeland Solicitors for Dieno George
Mr Jonathan Caplan QC & William McCormick (instructed by) Eversheds LLP for Paul Anthony Sanders
Mr Charles Salmon QC & Christopher Coltart (instructed by) Cooper Kenyon Burrows Solicitors for Christine Ann Davenport
Mr Peter Wright QC & Elizabeth Nicholls (instructed by) JMW Solicitors for Brian James John Ruane
Mr David Lane QC & Duncan McDiarmide (instructed by) Maidments Solicitors for Colin Frances Wilson
Hearing date: 25 November 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Pitchers :
History of the case
19 False statements by company directors, etc
(1) Where an officer of a body corporate or unincorporated association (or person purporting to act as such), with intent to deceive members or creditors of the body corporate or association about its affairs, publishes or concurs in publishing a written statement or account which to his knowledge is or may be misleading, false or deceptive in a material particular, he shall on conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding seven years.
(2) For purposes of this section a person who has entered into a security for the benefit of a body corporate or association is to be treated as a creditor of it.
(3) Where the affairs of a body corporate or association are managed by its members, this section shall apply to any statement which a member publishes or concurs in publishing in connection with his functions of management as if he were an officer of the body corporate or association.
The statutory framework.
"Dismissal of the charge, or of all the charges, against the applicant shall have the same effect as a refusal by examining magistrates to commit for trial, except that no further proceedings may be brought on a dismissed charge except by means of the preferment of a voluntary bill of indictment"
"the bill is preferred.. .by the direction or with the consent of a judge of the High Court."
The procedure is now set out in the Consolidated Criminal Practice Direction IV.35.
The correct approach to the application.
• What is the nature of the judge's decision at the dismissal hearing?
"On an application under s 6, it is not appropriate for the judge to view any evidence in isolation from its context and other evidence, any more than it is appropriate to derive a meaning from a single document or from a number of documents without regard to the remainder of the document or the other connected documents before the court. We reject the argument that the judge was bound to deal with the application under s 6 by assuming that a jury might make every possible inference capable of being drawn from a document against the defendant. Section 6 expressly provides that the judge will decide not only whether there is any evidence to go to a jury, but whether that evidence is sufficient for a jury properly to convict. That exercise requires the judge to assess the weight of the evidence. This is not to say that the judge is entitled to substitute himself for the jury. The question for him is not whether the defendant should be convicted on the evidence put forward by the prosecution, but the sufficiency of that evidence. Where the evidence is largely documentary, and the case depends on the inferences or conclusions to be drawn from it, the judge must assess the inferences or conclusions that the prosecution propose to ask the jury to draw from the documents, and decide whether it appears to him that the jury could properly draw those inferences and come to those conclusions."
• What is the test?
"The preferment of a voluntary bill is an exceptional procedure. Consent should only be granted where good reason to depart from the normal procedure is clearly shown and only where the interests of justice, rather than considerations of administrative convenience, require it."
"On the basis that the application was in effect an appeal from one single judge to another single judge whose judgment appeared to be clearly and carefully reasoned. He said it was not obviously wrong or unreasonable."
• Can fresh evidence be considered?
Application to the present case.
i) the publication of materially false accounts;
ii) knowledge of the falsity; and
iii) an intention to deceive members or creditors of the company.
i) Material falsity was something that the prosecution always had to prove;
ii) Since it was always acknowledged that 'trade loading' was a legal accounting practice, it was entirely foreseeable that a technical accountancy issue would arise as to where legal 'trade loading' ended and 'material falsity' began;
iii) When alerted to the argument in September 2004, the Crown made no attempt to get expert evidence, accompanied if necessary by an application to adjourn the first dismissal hearing; and
iv) Having failed against the first group of Defendants, the Crown then, on 1 February 2005, instructed a forensic accountant. However, they did not disclose that fact before the hearings in respect of the further Defendants and made no attempt to introduce expert evidence into the second dismissal hearing.
i) As the Crown argue, there is clearly a public interest in serious allegations of misconduct against directors of public companies being tried if the evidence is sufficient for them to be tried;
ii) The appropriate way for that public interest to be met is for the prosecution to present all cogent evidence available to them so that the charges are not dismissed under section 6(1);
iii) Those accused of serious crime are entitled to have the allegations against them determined without unreasonable delay not of their making;
iv) Twelve months have already passed since the first dismissal hearing and two or three more will pass before this application could be heard on its merits;
v) An application for the preferment of a Voluntary Bill is an exceptional procedure. It is not an appeal against the decision of the judge who dismissed the charges in the Crown Court. In R. v. Horsham Justices ex parte Reeves (1982) 75 Cr. App. R. 236, a case procedurally different from the present in that it concerned a prosecutor re-instituting proceedings following a refusal by justices to commit for trial, Ackner LJ, as he then was, posed the question:
"Should the prosecution be entitled, as they seek, to treat the first committal proceedings, for all practical purposes as a dummy run, and, having concluded that they over-complicated them, bring virtually the same proceedings but in a form in which they should have been brought if proper thought had been given by the prosecution to them, in the first place?"
He gave what he elsewhere in the judgment described as 'a dusty answer' to that question.
vi) The judge in this case heard submissions over several days and gave his reasons in detail. It is not argued by the Crown that he erred in law save that they say that he came to the wrong decision on the evidence. They ask me to substitute my judgment for his; and
vii) The 'new' evidence relied upon by the Crown could, for the reasons set out in paragraph 30 above, have been obtained before the hearings before Judge Clarke.
Conclusion.
33. For all the reasons set out above, I have no doubt that this application for consent to prefer a Voluntary Bill of Indictment is unsound in principle and should be refused in respect of each of the Defendants.