BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Stanton v. O'Toole [2000] IESC 36 (9th November, 2000)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2000/36.html
Cite as: [2000] IESC 36

[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]


Stanton v. O'Toole [2000] IESC 36 (9th November, 2000)

THE SUPREME COURT

No. 305/99


Keane, C.J.
Denham, J.
Murray, J.

BETWEEN


CORNELIUS STANTON


PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

AND


PATRICK O’TOOLE

DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT



JUDGMENT delivered on the 9th day of November 2000 by Keane C.J.


1. I have read the judgment which will be delivered by Denham J. in this case. I agree entirely with the reasoning and the conclusions reached in the judgment and the order which she proposes.


2. I would also like, however, specifically to endorse her observation that the length of time taken to process this case through the High Court and this court is entirely inappropriate and that procedures for the case management of proceedings of this nature should be adopted in the superior courts. Given the [*2] nature of these cases, it is of critical importance that, while all the requirements of justice are met, they should be disposed in an expeditious manner as is reasonably practicable.



THE SUPREME COURT

No. 305/99


Keane, C.J.
Denham, J.
Murray, J.

BETWEEN


CORNELIUS STANTON


PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

AND


PATRICK O’TOOLE

DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT


Judgement of Mrs. Justice Susan Denham delivered the 9th day of November, 2000.



1. Appeal

3. This is an appeal by Cornelius Stanton, the plaintiff/appellant, hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff; from the judgment and order of the High Court (O’Donovan J.) delivered on 7th day of December, 1999. The plaintiff has sought his release pursuant to s.50 Extradition Act, 1965, as amended. The plaintiff is the subject of proceedings seeking his extradition to Scotland on foot of a warrant for his arrest and order made in relation thereto by District

4. Judge Collins on 2nd November, 1998. The plaintiff was arrested on foot of the said warrant on 22nd June, 1998 and remains in custody.


2. Facts

5. On 24th day of September, 1993 the plaintiff was arrested by an inspector of the


6. Strathclyde Police Force in Scotland. On 28th day of September, 1993 he appeared before [*2] Glasgow Sheriff Court and was remanded in custody charged with an offence. On 5th day of October, 1993, the plaintiff reappeared before the Glasgow Sheriff Court and was granted bail in respect of the said offence subject to conditions, which included that he attend for trial. The plaintiff failed to attend at Glasgow High Court on the 15th day of August, 1994 whereupon a warrant for his arrest was issued. The warrant was not executed as the whereabouts of the plaintiff was not ascertained by the Strathclyde Police Force until about December, 1996. At that time the Police Force obtained information that the plaintiff may have a fixed address in Cork. The information concerning the plaintiff’s whereabouts was communicated to the Procurator Fiscal in Glasgow in December, 1996. He in turn was instructed by the Crown Office in Edinburgh to establish whether after the lengthy passage of time there was still sufficient evidence available on which to prosecute the plaintiff. The Procurator Fiscal at Glasgow made further enquiries of the relevant witnesses and Crown Counsel’s instructions were obtained to the effect that an attempt should be made to bring the plaintiff back from Ireland to Scotland. The warrant which had issued on 15th day of August, 1994, was retrieved and, having sought to establish what the appropriate procedure was in relation to rendition from Ireland, a new warrant for the apprehension of the plaintiff was issued on 13th day of May, 1998, from the High Court of Justiciary, Parliament House, Edinburgh, Scotland.


7. The warrant was endorsed by the defendant Patrick O’Toole, Assistant Commissioner of An Garda Siochana, on 19th day of June, 1998, and executed on 22nd day of June, 1998 in the County of Cork. The plaintiff was brought before the District Court in the Dublin Metropolitan District on the 2nd day of November, 1998, on foot of the said warrant. The District Court Judge ordered the delivery of the plaintiff into the custody of a member of the [*3] Strathclyde Police, Glasgow for conveyance to the High Court of Justiciary, Parliament House, Edinburgh, Scotland.


8. The plaintiff appealed the order. In the High Court two questions arose as to the validity of the order of the District Court. First, it was argued that the offence as set out in the warrant dated 13th day of May, 1998, does not correspond with an indictable offence known to the law of this State and that the decision of the learned District judge to that effect was wrong and therefore her jurisdiction to make the order did not exist. Secondly, it was submitted on behalf of the plaintiff that, as there had been a lapse of over six years since his initial arrest and, because of the significant delay of the authorities, it would be unjust, oppressive and invidious to deliver him up under the provisions of section 47 of the Extradition Act, 1965, having regard to the provisions of section 50(2)(bbb) of the Extradition Act of 1965 as inserted by section 2(l)(b) of the Extradition (Amendment) Act, 1987. On these two issues - correspondence and delay - the learned High Court judge held against the plaintiff. He dismissed the proceedings and allowed the extradition ordered by the District Court on 2nd day of November, 1998, to proceed. However, the learned High Court judge held that the order for delivery should recite that the corresponding offence was rape contrary to section 4 of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act, 1990. Both of these matters were argued in the Supreme Court and are in issue.



3. Submissions

9. Mr. Feichín McDonagh, S.C., counsel for the plaintiff; presented written and oral submissions. He argued that the warrant submitted to support the application cannot be relied upon as it was not in the same terms as the original warrant but was drawn up to reflect the needs of the Irish Authorities rather than the practice of the Scottish Courts. It was submitted [*4] that there is good reason not to accept the documentation in light of the evidence of Inspector Henry Campbell that it was completely in conflict with the usual practice of the Scottish Court. Extensive references to case law were made on this and the next issue. The next issue argued by counsel was correspondence. It was submitted that there was no corresponding offence. That neither the offence identified by the District Court nor by the High Court was a corresponding offence. That the offence set out in the warrant does not meet the legal requirements. In fact, it was argued that the issue of correspondence and the presumptions contained in the Extradition Act (as they related to Inspector Campbell’s affidavit) were interrelated. It was queried as to how it came about that the plaintiff’s rendition is sought in respect of “an indictable offence” which appears to allege matters which counsel submitted could form the ingredients of fourteen separate offences in this jurisdiction. Counsel answered his query by reference to the affidavit of Inspector Campbell, paragraph 17, and argued that the documentation was void on its face.


10. Further it was submitted that there had been such significant delay as to bring the plaintiff within the statute. It was accepted that the defence only arises if exceptional circumstances exist and, further, if the Court takes the view that it would be unjust, oppressive or invidious to deliver the plaintiff It was submitted that in light of the facts of the instant case and in particular: (a) the absence of any real explanation for the delay involved in commencing extradition proceedings; (b) the approach of the Scottish authorities to their own procedure; and (c) the two years the plaintiff has spent in custody in this jurisdiction awaiting the outcome of these proceedings; that exceptional circumstances do exist such as would warrant the exercise by the Court of the discretion contained in s.50(2)(bbb) of the Extradition Act, 1965, as amended. [*5] Mr. Diarmaid McGuinness, S.C., submitted that none of the conditions of s.50(2)(bbb) have been met. Further, that there was no good reason why the District Court or the High Court might not have acted on the Scottish warrant. He submitted that at issue is the corresponding offence of rape. That the warrant describes acts of the plaintiff engaged in a single transaction, he gave effect to his intention to rape. In that single transaction there were multiple actions. Counsel submitted that the facts are set out on the warrant and that they correspond to the offence of rape.




4. Statutory Law

11. The relevant statutory law is to be found in the Extradition Act, 1965, as amended. At issue in this case is the rendition of the plaintiff to Scotland. Consequently, Part Ill of the Extradition Act, 1965, applies. Relevant sections are:


12. Section 43, subsection 1:


“Where-

(a) a warrant has been issued by a judicial authority in a place in relation to which this Part applies for the arrest of a person accused or convicted of an offence under the law of that place, being an indictable offence or an offence punishable on summary conviction by imprisonment for a maximum period of at least six months, and

(b) on production of the warrant to the Commissioner of the Garda Síochána, it appears to the Commissioner that the person named or described therein may be found in the State,

the Commissioner shall, subject to the provisions of this Part, endorse the warrant for execution.”

Section 45:

“(1) A warrant endorsed under Section 43 may be executed by any member
of the Garda Siochána in any part of the State.

[*6]

(2) The person named or described in the warrant shall on arrest be brought before a justice of the District Court for the district in which he was arrested, if a justice is immediately available.”

Section 47:

“(1) Where a person named or described in a warrant is before the District Court in pursuance of this Part that Court shall, subject to the provisions of this Part, make an order for his delivery at some convenient point of departure from the State into the custody of a member of a police force of the place in which the warrant has been issued, for conveyance to that place, and remand him until so delivered.

(2) An order shall not be made under subsection (1) if it appears to the Court
that the offence specified in the warrant does not correspond with any offence under the law of the State which is an indictable offence or is punishable on summary conviction by imprisonment for a maximum period of at least six months.

(3) In any case where the Court does not make an order under subsection (1), the Court shall order the person named or described in the warrant to be discharged.”

Section 50:

“(1) A person arrested under this Part shall be released if the High Court or the Minister so directs in accordance with this section.

(2) A direction under this section may be given by the High Court where the Court is of opinion that-
...

(c) the offence specified in the warrant does not correspond with any offence under the law of the State which is an indictable offence or is punishable on summary conviction by imprisonment for a maximum period of at least six months.”

Section 54:

“(1) Where the Commissioner receives a document appearing to be a warrant issued by a judicial authority in a place in relation to which this Part applies, together with an affidavit verifying the signature on the warrant and appearing to be sworn before a person duly authorised to take affidavits by the law of that place, the Commissioner may, without further evidence, accept the document as being such warrant and as having been duly signed and issued by a judicial authority in accordance with the law of that place and as evidence that the offence for which the warrant is issued is an offence under the law of [*7] that place and that the affidavit has been duly sworn before a person so authorised as aforesaid.

(2) A certificate, appearing to be given by the authority or the clerk or other officer of the authority by which a warrant was issued, that the offence to which it relates is, by the law of the place concerned, an indictable offence and not also a summary offence, or that it is a summary offence punishable by a specified maximum period of imprisonment may, without further evidence, be accepted by the Commissioner as evidence of the matters so certified.”

Section 55:

“(1) In any proceedings, unless the court sees good reason to the contrary-

(a) a document appearing to be a warrant issued by a judicial authority in a place in relation to which this Part applies for the arrest of a person for an offence may, if’ the signature on the warrant is verified as indicated in subsection (1) of section 54, be admitted in evidence as such warrant and as having been duly signed and issued by a judicial authority in accordance with the law of that place;

...

(c) a certificate appearing to be given in accordance with subsection (2) of section 54 may be admitted as evidence of the matters certified therein,

without further evidence.


...”

13. Section 50(2)(bbb) of the Act of 1965 (as amended) provides that the court may direct the release of a plaintiff if:


“by reason of the lapse of time since the commission of the offence specified in the warrant or the conviction of the person named or described therein of that offence and other exceptional circumstances, it would, having regard to all the circumstances, be unjust, oppressive or invidious to deliver him up under Section 47 ...“


5. Documents

14. Counsel for the plaintiff submitted that the court should not accept the documents grounding the application for the rendition of the plaintiff because of paragraph 17 of the affidavit of Henry Campbell, Inspector, Strathclyde Police. That paragraph sets out:


[*8]

“I say and am informed that the preparation of the fresh warrant took a considerable amount of time because what was being asked of the Scottish Court was completely in conflict with its usual practice and indeed the fresh extract warrant which was eventually granted was in all respects a fresh document reflecting the needs of the Irish Authorities rather than the practice of the Scottish Courts.”



15. Counsel for the plaintiff submitted that the court should not accept the warrant being as it was completely in conflict with usual practice in Scotland. However, it is clear that rather than presenting a bald warrant to the Irish Authorities the Scottish warrant was drawn up setting out particulars of the offence alleged. The accompanying certificate states that it is an indictable offence. In the circumstances it is reasonable to assume that the additional particulars on the warrant were added as a result of a request of the Scottish Authorities to the Irish Authorities as to procedures. Even if this case does not exhibit best practice it is not contrary to the Extradition Act The documents are valid on their face. Consequently, it was correct for the Garda authority to endorse the warrant. Further, in the court proceedings, no Scottish law was proved to query their validity. Indeed, the evidence relied upon was that of Inspector Campbell of Scotland. I am satisfied that there is no good reason to hold that the documents are invalid.


6. Correspondence

16. The next issue for the court is whether the offence is a corresponding offence. This case raises for decision a specific type of rendition. The relevant law is to be found in Part III of the Extradition Act, 1965, as amended. It is a backing of warrants scheme as set out in statutes. The legislation provides that where a warrant has been issued by a judicial authority in a place in relation to which Part III applies for the arrest of a person accused of an [*9] indictable offence, on production of the warrant to the Commissioner of the Garda Siochana to whom it appears that the person named or described may be found in the State, the Commissioner shall endorse the warrant for execution. In this case a warrant was issued by a judicial authority in Scotland, to which Part III applies, for the arrest of the plaintiff, who was in Ireland.


17. An order shall not be made for the rendition of a person if it appears to the court that the offence specified in the warrant does not correspond with any offence under the law of the State which is an indictable offence or is punishable on summary conviction by imprisonment for a maximum period of at least six months: section 47(2) Extradition Act, 1965. The certificate filed with the backed warrant states that the offence specified in the warrant dated 13th May, 1998, is by the law of Scotland an indictable offence and punishable by imprisonment for a maximum period of at least six months and that it will not be prosecuted summarily.


18. The issue is whether there is a corresponding offence in this State. The warrant in issue recites that the plaintiff has been indicted for the offence of:



“On the 24th day of September 1993 at Laidlaw House, 95 Cheapside Street, Glasgow, you did assault Frances O’Rourke, care of Cranston Hill Police Office, Glasgow, seize hold of her, remove her clothing, struggle with her, place your hand over her mouth, throw her to the floor, scratch her on the face, restrain her, repeatedly pull her hair, force her to take your private member in her mouth and suck same, handle and insert your fingers into her private parts, penetrate her hinder parts with your private member, masturbate in her presence, lie on top of her, force her legs apart and rape her.”



19. The District judge held that the offence specified in the warrant corresponds with an offence under the law of the State which is an indictable offence, namely, section 2 of the [*10] Criminal Law (Rape) Act, 1981, as amended. On appeal, in the High Court, the learned High Court judge held:



“While the word ‘rape’ is used in the offence specified in the said warrant and, given its ordinary and popular meaning, that word could be understood to + mean the offence created by section 2 of the 1981 Act in the circumstances that section 2(1) of that Act specifically provides that it is an ingredient of the offence of rape that the woman with whom the accused is alleged to have had sexual intercourse does not consent to it and that the accused knows that she does not so consent or is reckless as to whether or not she does and there is no suggestion that the absence of such consent is an ingredient of the offence specified in the said warrant. I am not satisfied that the offence specified in the warrant does correspond with an offence of rape contrary to Section 2 of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act, 1981. However, I have no doubt at all but that the offence specified in the said warrant does correspond with a number of offences under the law of this State which are indictable offences or offences punishable on summary conviction by a maximum period of at least six months and, in particular, I am satisfied that the offence specified in the warrant corresponds with the offence of rape contrary to the provisions of Section 4 of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act of 1990.”



20. Thus, the offences identified by the District Court and the High Court are different. One is to be found in s.2 of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act, 1981, and the other in the Crimina1 Law (Rape) (Amendment) Act, 1990.


Section 2 of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act, 1981, states:

“(1) A man commits rape if-
(a) he has unlawful sexual intercourse with a woman who at the time of the intercourse does not consent to it, and
(b) at that time he knows that she does not consent to the intercourse or he is reckless as to whether she does or does not consent to it, and references to rape in this Act or any other enactment shall be construed accordingly.

(2) It is hereby declared that if at a trial for a rape offence the jury has to consider whether a man believed that a woman was consenting to sexual intercourse, the presence or absence of reasonable grounds for such a belief is a matter to which the jury is to have regard, in conjunction with any other relevant matters, in considering whether lie so believed.”


[*11] Section 4 of the Criminal Law (Rape) (Amendment) Act, of 1990 states:



“(1) In this Act ‘rape under section 4’ means a sexual assault that includes-
(a) penetration (however slight) of the anus or mouth by the penis, ...“


21. This Court on this appeal may determine the corresponding offence. The Court is not bound either by the offence identified as the corresponding offence by the District Court or the offence identified as the corresponding offence by the High Court. This Court may substitute its own view of the corresponding offence.


22. The Court must look at the factual elements of the offence to see if they would constitute an offence in Ireland. The particulars set out in the warrant are full and graphic. An ‘algebraic’ approach to the analysis of the factual element of offences has been taken previously by this Court. Thus, in State (Furlong) v. Kelly [1971] I.R. 132 at p.141 O’Dalaigh, C.J., stated:


23. “The basic inquiry is to discover whether the several ingredients which constitute the offence specified in the warrant, or one or more of such ingredients, constitute an offence under the law of the State and, if they do, whether that offence (the “corresponding offence”) is an indictable offence or, if not, whether it is punishable on’ summary conviction by imprisonment for a maximum period of at least six months. As to the first limb of the inquiry, the position may be illustrated algebraically as follows. If the English offence consists of, say, four essential elements a+b+c+d, then a corresponding Irish offence exists only if it contains either precisely these same four essential elements or a lesser number thereof. lf the only Irish offence that can be pointed to has an additional essential ingredient (that is to say, if the Irish offence may be defined as a+b+c+d+e), then there is no corresponding Irish offence to satisfy the requirements of s.47, sub-s. 2, of the Act of 1965 for the simple reason that, ex hypothesi, conduct a+b+c+d falls short of being an offence under Irish law or, in plainer words, is not an offence. It is fundamental to extradition that no one shall be extradited for acts or omissions (the offence alleged in the warrant) which, if repeated within the State, would not offend against our law.”


[*12] In effect, the elements of the offence of the requesting State must be elements of an offence in Ireland. The Court must look at the factual components of the offence specified to determine if there is a corresponding offence. As stated by Henchy, J., in Hanlon v. Fleming [1981] I.R. 489 at p. 495:


“The relevant decisions of this Court, such as the State (Furlong) v. Kelly. Wyatt v. McLoughlin and Wilson v. Sheehan show that it is a question of looking at the factual components of the offence specified in the warrant, regardless of the name given to it, and seeing if those factual components, in their entirety or in their near entirety, would constitute an offence which, if committed in this State, could be said to be a corresponding offence of the required gravity. The required gravity is not in issue here. What is in issue -and this is the nub of this appeal - is whether the factual elements of the specified offence, if laid in this State (either precisely or substantially as set out in the warrant) as the particulars of an indictment for an offence contrary to s. 33, sub-s.!, of the Larceny Act, 1916, would be a correct basis for a finding of guilty by a correctly charged jury.”



24. In the warrant seeking the plaintiff there are words setting out particulars which conclude with the words “and rape her”. It is certified that it is an indictable offence. Thus, it describes the acts of the plaintiff as a single alleged transaction. It is a context of facts set out leading to the words “and rape her”.


25. It is not sufficient to use the name by which the crime is known. Thus, it would not be sufficient to recite merely that the plaintiff did rape her. As stated in Wyatt v. McLoughlin [1974] I.R. 378 by Walsh, J., at p.398:



“For the reasons stated in Furlong’s Case, it is necessary that either the warrant or some other document accompanying it should set out sufficient information as to these acts to enable the courts of the State to identify the corresponding offence, if any, in our law. It cannot be sufficient simply to use the name by which the crime is known, or alleged to be known, inthe requesting country even though that same name may be used in this country as the name of a crime, because the acts complained of, although having identical [*13] names, may constitute quite different criminal offences in different countries or, indeed, no offence at all in one of them.”



26. In this case the requesting jurisdiction sought to set out the factual elements of the offence as charged in the warrant. The question is whether the factual elements as set out in the warrant would constitute particulars of an offence in Ireland. It can be any offence covered by the Extradition Acts. This was described in Wilson v. Sheehan [1979] I.R. 423 at p.427 by Henchy J:


“It is to be noted that the requirement for extradition is satisfied when correspondence is shown between the specified offence and any offence which either is an indictable offence or carries a punishment on summary conviction of a maximum term of at least six months imprisonment Consequently, if the ingredients of the offence as specified in the warrant would, if laid as the ingredients of a criminal charge in this State, constitute any corresponding offence which either is indictable or carries on summary conviction a maximum term of at least six months imprisonment, the requirement will have been satisfied.”


27. In addition, the ordinary meaning should be given to the words. In Wilson v. Sheehan Henchy J. pointed out at p.428-9:



“If an offence is specified in the warrant merely by the name by which it is known in the requesting State, it does not follow that because there is an offence in this State which goes by the same name, the two offences correspond with each other. They may be crucially different in essence. To show the necessary correspondence - as was held in The State (Furlong) v. Kelly and in England in R. v. Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Ex p. Arkins , dealing with the corresponding provision in the Backing of Warrants (Republic of Ireland Act) 1965 - it is necessary for the specification of the offence in the warrant (or in the warrant and its attendant documentation) to go further and identify the offence by reference to the factual components relied on, it is only by looking at those components that a court in this State can decide whether the offence so specified (regardless of what name is attached to it) would constitute, if committed in this State, a corresponding criminal offence of the required gravity.

When it comes to the words in the warrant by which the factual content of the specified offence is identified, the correct rule is that those words should [*14] prima facie be given their ordinary or popular meaning unless they are used in a context which suggests they have a special signification. The reason for that rule is that, when statutes or other public or formal documents directed to the public at large, or to any member of the public at large, are being interpreted, it is to be assumed, in the absence of a counter-indication, that the words used in such document have been used in their popular rather than in any specialised or technical sense.”


28. The warrant in question in that case had alleged that the plaintiff on a named date at a named place in England:



“... did rob Michael Barker of £281 in cash and immediately before doing so used force, to wit, personal violence, on the said Michael Barker”.


29. Henchy J. held, at p.430:


“Since the word “rob” in ordinary usage means “deprive a person of property
unjustifiably by force,” all the District Justice had to decide was whether the
charge in the warrant that the plaintiff had robbed a person of money, using
personal violence to that person immediately before doing so, would constitute
an offence if the same conduct were charged in an indictment in this State”.


30. The word “rape” is used in the warrant. The ordinary meaning of the word “rape” is forcible sexual intercourse with a woman without her freely given consent. It is a common and freely used word which has this commonly understood meaning.


31. Taking all the case law, the requirement to look at the constituents of the offence, the importance of the facts, the ordinary meaning of the words, the most relevant precedent is found in Harris v. Wren [1984] I.L.R.M. 120.


32. In this case the warrant sets out particulars and uses the word “rape”. Neither the absence of consent by the victim nor the state of knowledge of the plaintiff are specifically addressed, as they would be on an indictment in Ireland. The plaintiff has laid great stress on the fact that the particulars do not specifically recite that the events took place without the [*15] consent of the victim or otherwise deal with the issue of consent. An analogous argument was made in Harris v. Wren . In that case the backed warrant sought the arrest of the plaintiff for a charge:


“For that he ... sometime between 1 January 1981 and 26 October 1981 at Mountain Ash in the County of Mid-Glamorgan did indecently assault Paul Armstrong born 7 March 1965 a male person under the age of 16 years (in that he tied the said Paul Armstrong to bedroom furniture, removed his clothing and struck him several blows across his bare buttocks) contrary to s.15(1) of the Sexual Offences Act 1956.”


33. Of the issue of “consent” raised in that case Finlay P. held at pp.121-2:



“The plaintiffs first contention is that since under the law in this State an indecent assault on a male person over the age of 15 years is a charge to which consent is a defence that for the learned district justice to have been justified in holding that the offence recited in the warrant corresponded with the offence of indecent assault in the law of this country it would have been necessary for there to be a particular in the recitation of the offence that the assault took place without the consent of the male person concerned. I have carefully considered this submission and I am satisfied that it is not valid. Quite apart from any statutory definition, the word ‘assault’ is one of unambiguous meaning. It involves the concept of a striking against the wishes of the person struck. Furthermore, I am satisfied that if there were any room for ambiguity in the meaning of the word ‘assault’ the particulars of what is alleged to have been done namely the tying of the person assaulted to bedroom furniture to restrain him, the removal by the accused and not by the person himself of his clothes and the striking by the accused of the body of the person all add up to an accusation quite specific and clear of a touching of the body of that person without his consent. It is suggested to me on behalf of the plaintiff that it would be possible to conceive of a situation in which the person subjected to this treatment was a person with perverse sexual tendencies who consented and took part in these activities willingly. I do not consider that the possibility of that being established would in any way take away from the ordinary and unambiguous meaning of the words contained in the offence recited in the warrant.”


34. The case was appealed to the Supreme Court and dismissed in an ex tempore judgment which upheld Finlay P.

[*16] The above judgment of Finlay P. in Harris v. Wren is analogous and may be applied to this case. Thus, the issue of consent is not dealt with expressly on the warrant yet the offence of rape in Ireland includes an element of lack of consent. I, too, have considered carefully this submission on behalf of the plaintiff and am satisfied that it is not valid. The word “rape” is one of unambiguous meaning. Furthermore, I am satisfied that if there was any room for ambiguity in the meaning of the word “rape” the particulars of what is alleged to have been done, all add up to an accusation of sexual intercourse with that person without her consent, including factual elements relevant to the plaintiff’s state of mind. The alleged offence is clear from the ordinary and unambiguous meaning of the words contained on the warrant. I am satisfied that alleged is the offence of rape contrary to section 2 of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act, 1981, as amended.

35. The fact that there are many possible offences in the particulars does not invalidate the warrant. The certificate refers to an indictable offence. Clearly, whilst other offences could have been alleged in this case one alone is being prosecuted. As the documents refer to ‘an offence’ it is appropriate to assume that the plaintiff will be prosecuted for the one offence alleged and certified. There is no issue of speciality argued in this case.




7. Delay

36. The conditions required by s.50(2)(bbb) of the Extradition Act, 1965, as amended, to raise a case for the plaintiff have not been met. The delay, in proceeding with the trial in Scotland, has arisen because the plaintiff breached conditions of bail and fled. The delay has arisen because of the plaintiff’s actions. Once he was located in Ireland it was entirely proper for the authorities in Scotland to take steps to establish that after the lengthy passage of time there was still sufficient evidence available on which to prosecute the plaintiff. It was [*17] entirely appropriate that the Procurator Fiscal at Glasgow made enquiries of the relevant witness and that Crown Counsel’s instructions were obtained. There are no exceptional circumstances within the meaning of section 50(2)(bbb). The plaintiff put no relevant evidence before the court as to his whereabouts after he fled his trial. This case is very different to the facts as established in Fusco v. O’Dea [1998] 3 I.R. 470 and Wan v. Conroy [1998] 3 I.R. 527. There is no evidence or circumstance put forward by the plaintiff which would establish that it would be unjust, oppressive or invidious to deliver him up.


37. Consequently, this ground of appeal must fail.


38. However, I would like once again to request that extradition cases are fast tracked in the High Court and Supreme Court. This requires solicitors, counsel and the courts to case manage extradition cases accordingly. The length of time it has taken to process this case through the Superior Courts is entirely inappropriate.


8. Conclusion

39. I would dismiss the appeal, for the reasons stated. I would affirm the District Court Order for Delivery, including its recitation that the corresponding offence is rape, contrary to section 2 of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act, 1981, as amended.



© 2000 Irish Supreme Court


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2000/36.html