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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Director of Public Prosecutions -v- Carter; Director of Public Prosecutions -v- Kenny [2015] IESC 20 (05 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2015/S20.html Cite as: [2015] 2 ILRM 240, [2015] IESC 20 |
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Judgment
Notes on Memo: 426/14, Director of Public Prosecutions -v- Kenny: answer question 1 & 2, yes, 3 does not arise 203/14, Director of Public Prosecutions -v- Carter: Dismiss appeal. ___________________________________________________________________________ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
THE SUPREME COURT Appeal No. 203/2014 Denham C. J. Hardiman J. O’Donnell J. Laffoy J. Dunne J. In the matter of s. 52 of the Courts (Supplemental Provisions) Act 1961
The Director of Public Prosecutions
(at the Suit of Garda Madden and Garda Hynes) Prosecutor/Appellant And
Jeffrey Carter Defendant/Respondent And Appeal No. 426/2014 In the matter of s. 16 of the Courts of Justice Act 1947 and the Case Stated
The People (at the Suit of the Director of Public Prosecutions) Prosecutor And
Seán Kenny Defendant
JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Hardiman delivered on the 5th day of March, 2015. 1. In this case I agree entirely with the order proposed by Mr. Justice O’Donnell, that the appeal in the case of Jeffrey Carter to be dismissed. 2. I agree with the proposed order in Mr. Carter’s case for precisely the reasons set out in the judgment of O’Donnell J. Accordingly I would dismiss the appeal in the case of Jeffrey Carter and affirm the decision of the learned High Court judge (O’Malley J). 3. In the case of Seán Kenny, I agree with the answers to the questions posed in the Case Stated by her Honour Judge Ring, which are to be found at para. 38 of the judgment of O’Donnell J. In one particular respect, however, I am unable to agree with the reasoning which leads to these conclusions. For reasons which will appear, I am unable to follow, in the circumstances of this case, the ratio of the old Irish case of R. (Mackey) v. Justices of the County of Limerick [1898] 2 I.R. 135. I do not find it necessary to do so in order to arrive at the answers proposed to the case stated. 4. This case concerns the interpretation of the deceptively simple words of s.99 of the Criminal Justice Act, 2006 as already twice amended, by s.60 of the Criminal Justice Act, 2007 and by s.51 of the Criminal Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2009. I emphatically agree with Mr. Justice O’Donnell when he says that this Section “has given rise to innumerable practical difficulties and problems of interpretation, only some of which are illustrated by the present cases”. I also agree with him when he says that:
6. I agree in general with the identification by Mr. Justice O’Donnell of the difficulties which have arisen in the application of this Section and with his observation that “these questions cannot be resolved by a simple, surface interpretation of apparently simple words, taken in the abstract”. On the contrary “the provision is one of considerable complexity and difficulty, requiring some learned debate, fine distinctions and considerable argument”. 7. Section 99 is intended to deal with a situation of common, perhaps almost daily, occurrence in some at least of the Courts exercising criminal jurisdiction. A clearer and more transparent provision, which pays due attention to the rights of both parties to a criminal proceeding, is urgently required. 8. In my view, the issue in Mr. Kenny’s case comes down to the interpretation of the words “next sitting”. The immediate statutory context is as follows:
Where a person to whom an order under subsection (1) applies [that is, a person who received a sentence which was suspended on terms] is, during the period of suspension of the sentence concerned, convicted of an offence, being an offence committed after the making of an order under subsection (1), the Court before which proceedings for the defence are brought shall, before imposing sentence for that offence, remand the person in custody or on bail to the next sitting of the Court that made the said order.” (Emphasis added)
10. The facts of the case of Seán Kenny, insofar as relevant, or set out in the case stated. I gratefully adopt them and am in any case bound to do so since the Court has no other information about the facts. This judgment is not comprehensible without reference to the Case Stated. 11. In this case, the Court which imposed a suspended sentence was the Dublin Circuit Criminal Court. The individual judge who imposed that sentence had retired by the date of the proceedings before District Judge Blake in the present case but that is not a difficulty: the remand is to the next sitting of the Court, not of the judge, that made the previous order. “Next sitting”. 12. On the hearing of this appeal, counsel for the State contended for a broad interpretation of “next sitting” to mean “next convenient sitting” or “next reasonably practicable sitting”. To my mind this would be to read words into the Section which a court is not entitled to do. Counsel painted an affecting feature of a court sitting one morning in County Donegal which, having convicted a person, discovers that he is the subject of suspended sentence imposed by a court sitting in County Kerry. He went on to hypothesise a garda car proceeding at high speed from Donegal to Kerry in order to bring the prisoner to a hypothetical “next sitting” of the Court in Kerry which is scheduled, it is imagined, for that very afternoon. His hypothesis extended to the proposition that the garda car might pass another proceeding at high speed from Kerry to Donegal with a prisoner whose position was the mirror image of that of the Donegal prisoner. But these rather fevered imaginings are far removed from the facts of Mr. Kenny’s case. 13. This case comes down to a point of statutory interpretation. In such a case, in the words of Chief Justice Keane in A.B. v. Minister for Justice [2002] I.R. 296, Chief Justice Keane said:
(Emphasis added) 14. I believe that the meaning of the term “next sitting” emerges sufficiently from the Rules of the Circuit Court. Order 1, Rule 1 of the said Rules provides as follows:
(Emphasis added)
(Emphasis added)
I do not believe that any difficulty arises from the fact that the Rule uses both the terms “Sittings” and the term “Sitting”, while the Statute speaks of “next sitting”. Firstly, by virtue of s.18(a) of the Interpretation Act, 2005, the singular form incorporates the plural and vice versa. I do not believe that any contrary intention appears in the Rule. It is of significance that the notice required to be given before a sitting begins must specify the day of commencement of the sitting and the day of its termination. From this it follows that a “sitting” may run over a number of days, or indeed a number of weeks or a number of months. There is not a separate “sitting” each time a judge takes his or her seat on the Bench. 15. Accordingly, I believe that the phrase “next sitting” in a statutory context, means the next sitting of the Circuit Court which the President has “directed” and of which notice has been given as required. This “direction” is made under statutory power, viz. s.10(2)(a), in Part III of the Courts of Justice Act, 1947. 16. I cannot see how the word “sitting” used in a later Act, such as s.99(9) of the Criminal Justice Act, 2006, as amended, could have a different meaning, at least in the absence of a new statutory definition of the term. The statute of 1947 creates a power in the President of the Circuit Court to fix the places (s.10(2)(a) and times (s.10(2)(b) of sittings of the Circuit Court. Once these are fixed by the President “sittings within that circuit shall be held at such places and commence on such dates as may be fixed by the order”. Similarly “sittings shall commence at each such place in accordance with the order”. 17. From the terms of the Rule it would appear that what is a power in the statute has become a duty which must be performed (“shall”) in the Rules. But the salient feature is that the phrase “next sitting” means next sitting appointed by the order of the President or senior judge which “directs” the times and places for the sittings of the Circuit Court in the Dublin Circuit”. 18. The requirement to publish the order of the President or senior judge is also suggestive: the date of the next sitting of the Dublin Circuit Court is a matter of public record, available to everyone from an official source. 19. It is certainly true that there is power to cancel a sitting for good reason and also to extend a sitting or to appoint a sitting for urgent matters at times when sittings do not ordinarily take place, viz. evenings, weekends or vacations. But the “next sitting” of the Circuit Court means the next sitting directed and appointed by the judge authorised to do so, and widely notified, and not special sittings for special purposes which may be unknown to all but the parties directly involved. 20. I note the reliance placed by Mr. Justice O’Donnell on the old Irish case of R. (Mackey) v. Justices of the County of Limerick [1898] 2 I.R. 135, and admire the diligence which brought to light this obscure authority. This was a forfeiture application under the Fisheries (Ireland) Act, 1842. Section 103 of that Act provided that where nets were seized it would be lawful for the Fisheries Officer “to retain the same in his custody until the next sitting of the Petty Sessions Court or any adjournment thereof… and at such court it shall be lawful for the Justices to order the forfeiture of such nets”. On the night of the 3rd January a water bailiff seized certain nets said to have been used illegally on weirs in the River Shannon. He applied for a forfeiture order at a sitting of the Court on the 18th January. But there had been a previous court on the 4th January, and another on the 15th January. The Court of Queen’s Bench in Ireland, consisting of four judges, held that the “next sitting” meant, not the “absolutely” next sitting of the Court but the sitting “next after the seizure at which it was reasonably practicable to proceed”. O’Brien LCJ held:
In Mackey it is recorded in the Report (p.137) that there was a criminal prosecution of Mr. Mackey for illegal fishing, and that the application for forfeiture had taken place immediately after the prosecution concluded. But there is nothing to suggest that the defendant had been remanded, either in custody or on bail, pending this prosecution. The Report is wholly concerned with the jurisdiction to make the order of forfeiture of the nets. I would not read in words such as “next reasonably practicable sitting” into a statute permitting an individual to be remanded in custody. Firstly, it is indefinite: if such a remand took place at the end of the summer term, or just after a sitting of the Circuit Court in some particular county, so that the Court had moved on to another county, the remand might be of very long duration. I do not believe that the old Court of King’s Bench would have permitted an individual to be remanded in custody for an indefinite or uncertain period, or would so have interpreted a statute when the literal meaning would have meant a much shorter remand. In any event, the Court of King’s Bench at the end of Queen Victoria’s reign was not operating in the context of a written Constitution which expressly acknowledges the right to personal liberty, and obliges the Courts to recognise, defend and vindicate that right. Section 99(9) of the Act of 2006 is a provision which permits the remand of a citizen in custody. Such a power of remand must be strictly limited in time and I would not give a broad meaning to any statutory phrase which permitted remand beyond the absolute minimum necessary, or which was of a duration not specifically limited on the face of the order. 22. In other words, I firmly believe that the order made by the learned District Judge in Kenny’s case was a proper one, it was in compliance with the statute. But I have not arrived at this conclusion on the basis of resorting to a broad construction of the word “next”. To the extent that Mackey would permit such a broad construction, I would not follow it. This is (a) because s.99(9) is a provision connected to the imposition of a penalty and (b) because it delimits the period of a remand possibly (and actually in Mr. Kenny’s case) in custody. I do not favour an expansive reading of such a provision. 23. It is absolutely unacceptable that a person should be brought by the prosecution before the Court which is required to remand him to the “next sitting” of (usually) another court, without the prosecution being able to inform the Court as to when that “next sitting” is. This is not fair to the Court and it is not fair to the accused. Such a person will always be brought before the Court at the suit of the prosecution and the defendant himself may have little or no notice of the event. It is therefore for the prosecution, which always be the moving party, to ascertain when the next sitting of the Court is. In the case of the Circuit Court there can be no difficulty in this because notice of the sitting will have been given. 24. For the reasons, and with the qualification, set out above, I agree with the answers to the Case Stated in Mr. Kenny’s case which are to be proposed by Mr. Justice O’Donnell.
The Director of Public Prosecutions v. Carter (“Carter”) 9. The defendant duly appeared in court on the 2nd of April and District Judge McNamara was presiding. On that occasion counsel for the defence made a submission that the case was not properly before the court because it was alleged that the defendant had not been remanded to the “next sitting” of the District Court. Judge McNamara considered that in any event she could not deal with the matter and remanded the defendant to appear before Judge Watkin on the 17th April 2012. On the 6th of December 2012 Judge Watkin, having heard submissions and received written submissions, ruled that the defendant had not been properly remanded on the 26th of March 2012 to the 22nd April 2012 because he was remanded for a week rather than to the very next day that the District Court was sitting. However, she also held that there had been a waiver of right to remand to the next day that the Dublin Metropolitan District Court was sitting. Accordingly, she found the matter was correctly before Judge McNamara on the 2nd of April 2012 and accordingly, there was jurisdiction to remand the matter further to be dealt with by Judge Watkin. She then agreed to state a consultative case stated for the opinion of the High Court as to the correctness of the ruling made. The Decision of the High Court 11. The defendant also relied on a recent statement of the Court of Criminal Appeal in The People (at the suit of the Director of Public Prosecutions) v. Devine [2011] IECCA 67 (“Devine”) where that Court had imposed a suspended sentence on the defendant. During the period of suspension the accused appeared before the District Court charged with offences and pleaded guilty. The District Court was not informed of the amendment to section 99, and accordingly proceeded to impose a three month sentence and only then remanded him to the Court of Criminal Appeal. The Court of Criminal Appeal held that as both that Court and the District Court were creatures of statute, the District Court had no jurisdiction to impose sentence on the accused without first complying with section 99(9) and that the jurisdiction of the Court of Criminal Appeal to reactivate a suspended sentence under section 99 only arose if the respondent had been remanded to that Court in accordance with section 99(9). Accordingly, the Court expressed the view that it would be necessary to set aside the order made by the District Judge and have an order made in compliance with section 99(9) of the Criminal Justice Act 2006 before the Court of Criminal Appeal would have jurisdiction to reactivate sentence under section 99 and therefore made no order on the revocation application. 12. The High Court Judge observed that there may be a degree of tension between the classical view as endorsed by the Supreme Court in Ivers relating to the general immateriality of the procedure by which the defendant was brought to court, and the approach exemplified by the decision of the Court of Criminal Appeal in Devine. The Court considered however that the matter was one of jurisdiction. The issue was not whether the defendant had properly been brought before the District Court but whether a lawful foundation had been laid to the exercise by the District Court of its powers under subs. (10) of the Act. The judge considered that the matter was to be approached on the basis that the powers in relation to sentences were now entirely governed by statute and that the statutory power to revoke such a sentence under subs. (10) of the Act depended on a valid order having been made under subs. (9). Accordingly the High Court followed Devine, and held that the District Court had no jurisdiction to deal with the defendant. That decision has now been appealed to this Court. The Director of Public Prosecutions v. Kenny (“Kenny”) 14. On the 18th of June 2014, when the case came before the Dublin Circuit Criminal Court, the judge raised the issue of whether the order of remand made on the 11th of June was a valid order having regard to the decision in the Carter case and the fact that there had been hearings in the Circuit Court in the intervening period. On the 24th July 2014, the defendant was before the Dublin District Court charged with further offences and again another order was made under section 99(9) on that date remanding the accused to the 25th July. The Circuit Court Judge stated a case to this Court referring the following questions for determination:
(ii) Was I correct in law in finding the defendant was lawfully before the Circuit Court pursuant to the provisions of section 99(9) of the Criminal Justice Act 2006 (as amended) in that I found that the remand from June 11th 2014 to June 18th 2014 was to the next sitting of the court. (iii) If the answer to question (i) is no, what are the consequences for the hearing of the revocation of the suspended sentence imposed on the defendant?” Next Sittings 16. What, for example, is the position where a person is about to be sentenced and section 99(9) is then triggered, but at the particular time of the day, it is not possible to get the person to the next sitting of the court in another part of the country? What is the position when the first court remands the accused to a fixed and scheduled sitting of the second court, but in the period between the two hearings an emergency hearing is fixed? What happens if the court inquires as to the next sitting of the activating court; is informed of such a sitting; and in fact another earlier sitting had been fixed? In the District Court, different lists can be dealt with in the morning and in the afternoon sessions, sometimes dealing with quite different matters. Sometimes busy District and Circuit Courts divide the day’s business into a number of different lists each with its own time slot. Are each of these sessions a different sitting? So that each one is capable of being a “next sitting” for the purposes of section 99? What is the position in relation to emergency sittings of courts, perhaps out of hours and at weekends, or night sittings in the Dublin Metropolitan District? 17. It seems clear that these questions cannot be resolved by a simple, surface interpretation of apparently simple words, taken in the abstract. It is necessary to read the words in context. The maxim nemo tenetur ad impossibilia (see D. Greenberg (ed.), Craies on Legislation (London; Sweet & Maxwell; 2008; 9th edition), pp. 365-366) might provide some answer to these problems. However, in my view some useful light is cast on these questions by an old Irish case of Reg. (Mackey) v. Justices of the County of Limerick [1898] 2 I.R. 135 (“Mackey”), which it appears was not referred to in argument before the High Court Judge in Carter. 18. Mackey’s case was a criminal prosecution under the Fisheries (Ireland) Act 1842 (“the 1842 Act”). Section 103 of that Act provided that where nets were seized it would be lawful for the fisheries officer to:
19. The matter came before the Court of Queen’s Bench consisting of the Lord Chief Justice Sir Peter O’Brien, Chief Baron Palles, and O’Brien and Johnson JJ.. The Court relied on s. 106 of the 1842 Act which permitted offences alleged to have been committed on any lake or river in a boundary between two counties to be prosecuted in either of the counties or districts. Accordingly, the Court took the view that it was permissible to prosecute the matter in Limerick, and at the Castleconnell Petty Sessions, and the issue was therefore, whether the next session was the 4th or the 18th of January. The Court unanimously held that the words “next sitting” meant the first sitting “next after the seizure at which it was reasonably practical to proceed”. 20. Sir Peter O’Brien stated the question whether the words “next sitting” are to be limited to the “absolutely next sitting after the seizure referred to in the section, or whether these words mean the first sitting at which it is reasonably practical to proceed for the forfeiture of the nets seized” (p. 138). He observed that if the Court “confined the words ‘next sitting’ to the next actual Sessions, the object of the Act of Parliament would in very many cases be defeated, for the duty, on such a hypothesis, imposed by the statute would be often impracticable” (p. 138). He gave an example of a seizure some miles from the Petty Sessions Court at 11 o’clock and the next sitting of the Sessions at 11.15. Furthermore, the authorised officer who seized the nets acts under a board of conservators and it would appear to be reasonable that he should have time to consult the board as to the steps to be taken after seizure. Sir Peter O’Brien concluded:
It might be possible to conclude that these decisions provide the legal background against which the 2006 Act was drafted, and by reference to which the phrase “next sitting” must be understood. But in any event, these decisions, and in particular the Mackey decision, provide a logical approach to the interpretation of the sections, which leads to the conclusion that next sitting means the next sitting which is reasonably possible in the circumstances of the case. It is notable that the respective Courts did not need to have resort to any canon of construction to come to this conclusion: this interpretation was considered to be the logical consequence of the Court’s analysis of the section. Once the context was fixing of dates in Court proceedings, and when there was no hint in the statute that time was considered to be of the essence to the provision, next sitting was to be understood to mean next reasonably possible. I should say however that reasonable practicality may have a different impact in modern times than in the rather more leisurely 19th Century legal world. Given ease of communication and travel which is now the norm, the next reasonably possible sitting would normally be the next full day of court hearings. I have considered the argument that the fact that a remand can be in custody should require an even stricter approach. First, as I understand it, the case stated does not suggest that this remand was in custody. Second, the section does not distinguish between remands and applies the same requirement whether the remand is in custody or not. Third, the act does not evince any concern as to the extent of time involved. Thus there is no requirement as to when the remand must be made: the only requirement is that it should occur before sentence. Once a remand has been made there is no requirement as to the time within which the question of reactivation must be dealt with and further remand made to the sentencing court. Finally I consider that an unduly strict approach to the concept of sitting might lead to quite lengthy remands. Accordingly I consider the approach outlined above to the meaning of 'next' in the statutory phrase is the correct one. This it appears is what is meant by “next”: however the Court must also consider what is meant by ‘sitting’ in this context, so that the statutory phrase as a whole may be interpreted. Sitting
2. This Rule applies to the Dublin Circuit only subject to the provisions of Rule1 hereof. The President of the Circuit Court if assigned to the Dublin Circuit or the Senior Judge of the Dublin Circuit if the President is not assigned to that Circuit shall direct and appoint the times and places for the Sittings of the Circuit Court in the Dublin Circuit. Notice of such Sittings shall be published in Iris Oifigiuil not later than two months before the date thereof. The said notice shall set out the day of commencement and the day of termination of each Sitting. Provided that the President of the Circuit Court if assigned to the Dublin Circuit or the Senior Judge of the Dublin Circuit if the President of the Circuit Court is not assigned to the Dublin Circuit may with the consent of all the Judges permanently assigned to the Dublin Circuit extend any Sittings of the Circuit Court in the Dublin Circuit beyond the date of termination of that Sittings. It will not be necessary to publish any notice of such extension.” (emphases added)
2. Notice of Sittings in the Dublin Circuit shall set out the day of commencement and the day of termination of each Sitting. Provided that the President of the Circuit Court may extend any Sittings of the Circuit Court in the Dublin Circuit beyond the date of termination of that Sittings.” 24. It is not perhaps necessary to resort to the terms of s. 18(a) of the Interpretation Act 2005 which provides that the singular form incorporates the plural and vice versa, and which is applicable both to statutes, and to statutory instruments, although that canon of construction does reinforce the interpretation of the section to which I have come. The use of the singular form in Order 1, Rule 2 of the Circuit Court Rules, as originally set out, is in accordance with the interpretative rule and seems to make it clear that a sitting (singular) commences on the first day fixed and terminates on an appointed date. Accordingly, it appears that in this context “next sitting” means the next sitting which the President of the Circuit Court has “directed and appointed” (in the case of the Dublin Circuit) and of which at least two months notice has been given in the prescribed form. It follows therefore that the next sitting is the next sitting scheduled, announced or fixed in accordance with the rules. The use of the singular is appropriate in section 99 because there can only be one “next” sitting. It follows therefore that the remand under section 99 must be to the next sitting as so defined. 25. In the case of vacation sittings pursuant to Order 1, Rule 4, such sittings must be fixed “on such dates as may be announced” in the Dublin Circuit, and in other circuits these sittings may be fixed by the President of the Circuit Court under s. 10 of the Courts of Justice Act 1947 which permits the President of the Circuit Court, from time to time, to fix both the place and dates upon which sittings in a Circuit are to be held. Accordingly, this suggests that the next sitting of the Circuit Court must be to such formal and scheduled sittings. This does not encompass occasions under Rule 5 when the court hears urgent applications. On such an occasion it may be said of course that the court “sits”, but that it is not a “sitting”, within the meaning of the Act. 26. On this basis, and leaving aside any question of reasonable practicability, the “next sitting” in the Kenny case was indeed the 18th June to which date the defendant had been remanded. Applying this approach to the District Court however, leads to a different conclusion, particularly in the Dublin Metropolitan District. There are no equivalent sittings in the Dublin District Court to the sittings appointed in the Circuit Court or in the other Districts. It seems therefore that “next sitting” in the Dublin Metropolitan District envisages the next full day upon which the District Court sits to transact the general business of the District Court. I appreciate that the Dublin Metropolitan District sits both at night and at weekends to deal with urgent business, and that s. 27 of the Courts of Justice Act 1953 permits a judge of the District Court sitting for the transaction of any particular class of business to transact at such sitting any other class of business, but I consider that since section 99 applies without distinction to Circuit Courts and District Courts (and indeed other courts which are not the subject of these proceedings) and to urban and rural courts, it must be understood as meaning formal sitting and therefore the next sitting to which a person should be remanded is the next day. It follows that the remand in the Carter case was not in accordance with the section as so interpreted. It is one more unsatisfactory feature of section 99 that a lawful remand under the section, which may be in custody, will normally be overnight in the case of the District Court but may be some days, even weeks hence, in the case of the Circuit Court, depending on the date the matter arises. This does nothing for efficiency, to say nothing of the respect due to the citizen’s right to liberty. Court Failure to Comply with Section 99
The order of the District Court returning the appellant for trial in my opinion has not lost its validity as a return although not acted upon in due time. It would, I am satisfied, require an order of the court of trial or of the High Court to set it at nought.” (p. 131)
31. In the course of the judgment in In Re Singer, Ó’Dálaigh J. adverted to another point which was discussed in argument in this case. That is the fact that the return for trial had not been quashed. It is a general and important principle that orders made by bodies having jurisdiction to do so “bear no stamp of invalidity on their face”, and may be perfectly effective as a matter of law unless and until quashed by a court of competent jurisdiction. (See Smith v. East Elloe Rural Disctrict Council & Ors [1956] AC 736). Thus for example in Re Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann (unreported; 5th December 1977), it was held by Finlay P. that a planning permission was required to be treated as valid by a District Court hearing a licensing application, and that the Court was not entitled to entertain what would amount to a collateral challenge to it. As it was put in Wade, Administrative Law (Forsyth (ed.)) (Oxford; Oxford University Press; 2000; 8th edition), p. 287, “The court will take an administrative act or order as invalid only if the right remedy is sought by the right person in the right proceedings”. It is not necessary to explore here the limits of this doctrine because in this case the Act seems to make compliance with section 99(9) a precondition of the exercise of the power under section 99(10). Thus, section 99(10) undoubtedly requires that the suspending court should revoke the order unless the court considers it unjust to do so, but the court is defined as a court “to which a person has been remanded under subsection (9)”. This seems to make compliance with section 99(9) one of the requirements of a valid order under section 99(10). This conclusion is itself consistent with the observations of Palles C.B. in the Mackey case. He observed:
32. In Carter the learned judge observed that the prosecutor relied on a separate line of authority encapsulated in Ivers, to the effect that illegality (short of an intentional deprivation of constitutional rights such as that which occurred in The State (Trimbole) v. The Governor of Mountjoy Prison [1985] I.R. 550) attaching to the process by which the accused came before the court, does not necessarily have any effect on the jurisdiction of the court to deal with the matter. 33. The line of authority encapsulated in Ivers is of some antiquity, and importance. It can be traced back, at least in modern times, to the judgment of Davitt P. in The State (Attorney General) v. Judge Fawsitt [1955] I.R. 39 where he said:
It is equally clear that if a person is in Court, voluntarily or involuntarily, legally or illegally, an information or complaint may be made then and there “ore tenus” to the Justice, accusing such person of having committed a summary offence, and, if the information contains the necessary ingredients, the person may at once be charged with the offence….”. (p. 391)
36. In the course of her judgment in Carter, the trial judge observed that there was some tension between the Killeen/Ivers line of authority and decisions such as Devine where the Court of Criminal Appeal held that the District Court had no jurisdiction to impose sentence on the respondent without first complying with section 99(9) as amended. Counsel had suggested that the distinction was between a common law analysis where the position is where a person is brought to answer to a complaint and the proper construction of a mandatory self contained statutory procedure. However as the trial judge correctly observed, there are examples of the same principle being applied in the context of s. 4 of the Criminal Justice 1984, and accordingly the distinction is not one between the common law and statute, but is, as set out in Whelton v. O’Leary, a distinction related to whether the defect can be said to go to jurisdiction. In cases such as Ivers and others, it is important that the defect is in securing the attendance of the accused before a court which itself has jurisdiction to try the accused or otherwise deal with him or her. The provision which is not complied with in such a case does not relate to the substantive jurisdiction of the court to try the accused for the particular offences. Where however, compliance with a statutory provision is a condition precedent to the exercise of the jurisdiction or itself a proof which must be established (as in the cases under s. 49 of the Road Traffic Act 1961 as amended) then the breach is not irrelevant but can in a general sense be said to go to jurisdiction either to try the accused or otherwise deal with him or her. Application in Director of Public Prosecutions v. Kenny
(ii) Was I correct in law in finding the defendant was lawfully before the Circuit Court pursuant to the provisions of section 99(9) of the Criminal Justice Act 2006 (as amended) in that I found that the remand from June 11th 2014 to June 18th 2014 was to the next sitting of the court? Yes (iii) If the answer to question (i) is no, what are the consequences for the hearing of the revocation of the suspended sentence imposed on the defendant? In light of the answers to questions (i) and (ii) this does not arise. 38. It follows from the discussion above however, that the High Court Judge in Carter was correct to hold that the remand in that case was not in compliance with section 99 because the remand was for a period of a week and it was common case that the District Court had sat, and more importantly, was due to sit for scheduled sittings on a number of days between the 26th of March 2012 and the 2nd of April 2012. It also follows that the High Court Judge was correct to conclude that the true interpretation of section 99 was jurisdictional or perhaps more correctly, that failure to comply with section 99 could not be treated as a mere defect in securing the attendance of the accused in court. On its true interpretation, section 99(10) required that for the court to exercise jurisdiction under the section the person must be validly remanded under section 99(9). Subsection 10 of section 99 opens with the words “A court to which a person has been remanded under subsection (9)…” which must mean that a valid remand under subs. (9) is a predicate for the exercise of power conferred by subs. (10) I should, for completeness, say that this conclusion rests upon the assumption upon which the case was argued, that section 99 now replaces all common law power, and is the sole and statutory basis for both the imposition and the reactivation of suspended sentences. While the question of whether there remains a common law power to reactivate a suspended sentence which was not removed by the creation of the statutory jurisdiction under section 99, was touched on in this Court , it was not the subject of detailed argument in the High Court or on this appeal and accordingly I express no opinion thereon. 39. However, it should be noted that this reasoning would not necessarily apply in the same way to a remand from a reactivating court under section 99(10) to the convicting court under section 99(10A). That court is exercising its power to impose sentence in respect of a matter properly before it. The jurisdiction to do so comes from the court’s jurisdiction to try the offence. Trial, adjudication and sentence are normally indivisible parts of the administration of justice. Accordingly, the power to impose a sentence does not appear to be created or conferred by section 99(10A), or to be dependent upon it That section at best merely provides a mechanism to secure the individual’s attendance before the court. That however does not arise in this case, and accordingly, I would dismiss the appeal against the decision of the learned High Court Judge and affirm the answers she gave to the case stated. 40. Finally, I should say that there is an obligation on the prosecution in the sentencing court and which is aware of the existence of a suspended sentence and therefore the applicability of section 99, to be in a position to inform the court of the next sitting of the suspending court. This should be ascertainable without difficulty in relation to the District and Circuit Courts in Dublin, but even in the case of provincial District Courts and sittings of the Circuit outside Dublin this should not pose particular difficulty since the Courts Service website sets out terms and sittings of all the courts together with up to date information on changes to sittings. By the same token the representative of the accused should seek to ensure that the court has accurate information to allow it to discharge its function.
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