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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> O'Hara v. Procurator Fiscal [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_34 (27 June 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_34.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_34, 2007 SCCR 322, 2007 GWD 23-380, [2007] HCJAC 34, 2007 JC 206

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Philip

C.G.B. Nicholson, CBE, QC,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007HCJAC34]

Appeal No: XJ 515/06

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by C.G.B. NICHOLSON, CBE, QC

 

in

 

APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE

 

in causa

 

THOMAS O'HARA

Appellant;

 

against

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, AYR

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Appellant: Moll; Gilfedder & McInnes

Respondent: Borthwick A.D.; Crown Agent

 

27 June 2007

 

Background

[1] The appellant in this case was originally charged on a complaint which libelled four charges, each of which related to the theft from farm premises in Ayrshire of a quad bike. On the fourth of these charges he was charged along with a co-accused. The dates of the alleged offences ranged from 21 October 2005 to 10 April 2006. It appears that the appellant offered to plead guilty to charges 2 and 4 at his first appearance on 27 June 2006, but it was not until his appearance at an intermediate diet on 14 September 2006 that those pleas were accepted by the respondent. The case was then adjourned in order to obtain the normal reports and, on 26 October 2006, the appellant appeared for sentence.

[2] The facts, as set out by the sheriff, are that, in relation to charge 2, the quad bike in question had been parked in a garage into which the appellant had broken. The farmer had taken the precaution of parking a 4x4 vehicle in front of the quad bike in order to prevent theft. However, the appellant somehow moved this four-wheel drive vehicle and stole the quad bike. That bike was valued at £5,000, and it was not recovered. In relation to charge 4 it appears that the appellant and his co-accused had gone to the locus in a Ford Transit van. The quad bike in question was moved, and the back doors of the van were open to enable the bike to be loaded, when the appellant and his co-accused were interrupted by a witness. They then drove off with the van's doors still open. They were eventually traced, and admissions were made. In the circumstances the quad bike was not lost, and it remained in the possession of its owner.

[3] On 26 October 2006 the sheriff, having considered the reports which had been prepared, and having heard a plea in mitigation, proceeded to sentence the appellant. He concluded that a custodial sentence was required and, in respect of charge 2, he imposed a sentence of eighty days detention in a young offenders' institution, that sentence having been discounted from one of four months to reflect the early stage at which the appellant had first intimated a plea of guilty to the charge. In respect of that charge the sheriff also made a compensation order in the sum of £5,000, that being the value of the stolen quad bike. In relation to charge 4 the sheriff imposed a period of forty days detention, reduced from a starting point of two months, again on account of the early plea of guilty. The periods of detention were ordered to be served consecutively, making a total of 120 days - a period of around four months. It is against the foregoing sentences that the present appeal has been taken.

 

The submissions on behalf of the appellant and the decisions of the Court

[4] The first submission advanced by Mr Moll, counsel for the appellant, was that the custodial sentences imposed by the sheriff were incompetent. As has been mentioned above, the sheriff's sentence in respect of charge 2 was one which was discounted to eighty days detention from a starting point of four months. Consequently, the sheriff's starting point was a period in excess of three months which is, subject to an exception to which we return shortly, the statutory maximum for an offence at common law which is prosecuted summarily. Moreover, the sentence in respect of charge 4, albeit falling within that statutory maximum, was made consecutive to the sentence on charge 2 with the consequence that the total sentence on the complaint was one of 120 days. It is, of course, well established that consecutive sentences for two or more charges in a single complaint must not in total exceed the maximum permitted sentence for a single charge (see, for example, Nicholson v Lees 1996 SCCR 551). Accordingly, it was submitted that, if the sheriff in the present case was bound by a maximum sentence of three months imprisonment, his sentences were incompetent - individually in the case of the sentence on charge 2, and cumulatively in respect of the total sentence for the complaint as a whole.

[5] The statutory provision in question is section 5(2) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 which provides that a sheriff, on convicting any person of a common law offence, shall have power, inter alia, to "impose imprisonment, for any period not exceeding three months". However, the foregoing provision is modified by subsection (3) which provides that:

"Where a person is convicted by the sheriff of -

(a)    a second or subsequent offence inferring dishonest appropriation of property, or attempt thereat,

................

he may ..... be sentenced to imprisonment for any period not exceeding six months."

[6] In the present case the appellant has no previous convictions for the crime of theft. However, he has a previous conviction for a contravention of section 178(1)(a) of the Road Traffic Act 1988, which is the offence of taking and driving away a motor vehicle without having either the consent of the owner or other lawful authority. The sheriff took the view that that was an offence "inferring dishonest appropriation of property", and it appears that his view on that matter was not challenged at the time of sentence. Accordingly, the sheriff considered that in the present case he was entitled to impose custodial sentences up to a maximum of six months. However, Mr Moll's submission was that the sheriff had erred in coming to that conclusion, and that a conviction for a contravention of section 178(1)(a) of the 1988 Act did not properly fall to be regarded as a relevant previous conviction for the purposes of section 5(3) of the 1995 Act.

[7] Mr Moll was unable to refer us to any relevant case law which might offer support for that submission. However, he sought to find support in another section in the 1995 Act, namely section 249, which is the one which deals with compensation orders. Subsection (3) of that section provides:

"Where, in the case of an offence involving dishonest appropriation, or the unlawful taking and using of property or a contravention of section 178(1) of the Road Traffic Act (taking motor vehicle without authority etc) the property is recovered but has been damaged while out of the owner's possession, that damage, however and by whomsoever it was in fact caused, shall be treated for the purposes of subsection (1) above as having been caused by the acts which constituted the offence."

Mr Moll submitted that the disjunction, in the opening part of the subsection, of an offence involving dishonest appropriation from both the unlawful taking and using of property and a contravention of section 178(1) must mean that offences of the latter kind are not to be regarded as ones which involve dishonest appropriation; and for that reason they cannot be so regarded for the purposes of section 5(3) of the Act.

[8] We do not agree. In our opinion the three categories of offence which are detailed in subsection (3) have been separately mentioned simply for the avoidance of any doubt which might have arisen had there been a reference only to offences "involving dishonest appropriation"; and it does not mean that the other two categories of offence referred to are in some way free from the concept of dishonest appropriation. The first of those two categories is "the unlawful taking and using of property" which we take to mean the common law crime of furtum usus. Literally translated from the Latin, that means the theft of use which by its nature must, in our opinion, involve an element of dishonest appropriation. In the same way, we consider that the statutory offence under section 178 of the Road Traffic Act is but a statutory version of furtum usus. Indeed, our understanding is that, when that offence was first introduced into road traffic law many years ago, it was so introduced in order to get around the problem that "joy-riding", against which the offence is primarily directed, could seldom be successfully prosecuted as theft because the offence, by its nature, did not involve, as the crime of theft must, an intention permanently to deprive the owner of the vehicle in question. However, the absence of such an intention does not, in our opinion, have the consequence that the offence of taking a vehicle without permission is one which does not involve, or infer, dishonest appropriation.

[9] For the foregoing reasons, accordingly, we reject this part of the submissions advanced by Mr Moll. In our opinion, the present appellant's previous conviction for a contravention of section 178(1) of the Road Traffic Act was an offence "inferring dishonest appropriation of property" within the meaning of section 5(3) of the 1995 Act. It therefore follows that the sentences selected by the sheriff in the present case were, in our opinion, competent both individually and when taken together.

[10] Before leaving this part of the submissions advanced on behalf of the appellant we should mention that the submission relating to the competency of the custodial sentences selected by the sheriff had a wider significance than merely in relation to the length of those sentences. It also had potential significance in relation to the compensation order imposed in respect of charge 2 and any period of detention that might fall to be imposed in the event of default in payment. Had we held that the submission on the matter of competency was well founded we might well have dealt with that by making an appropriate reduction in the sentences of detention so that, individually and taken together, they did not exceed the section 5(2) maximum of three months. But, the maximum sentence of imprisonment or detention which can be imposed in default of payment of a fine (or a compensation order) of up to £5,000 is itself three months (1995 Act, ss. 252(2), 219(2)); and there is a clear line of authority (beginning with Fraser v Herron 1967 JC 1) to the effect that a custodial sentence in default of payment of a fine or other financial penalty cannot be imposed where to do so would involve exceeding the maximum sentence which can be imposed in respect of the original offence or offences. Accordingly, the consequence of the imposition of a custodial sentence at the level of the statutory maximum would have been that the appellant would have been able with impunity to make no payment in respect of the compensation order in the knowledge that no custodial sentence could be imposed in default. We have mentioned all of this because it was touched on by Mr Moll and because it features in the written Case and Argument submitted on behalf of the appellant (although that document was not drafted by Mr Moll). However, given our decision on the matter of competency the position now is that, if the sheriff's sentences, including the compensation order, are to stand, there will in fact be an "unused" period of around two months' detention which, should the need arise, could be invoked as a sanction in default of payment of all or part of the compensation order. Mr Moll, however, went on to submit that the sheriff should not have imposed a custodial sentence at all, and should not have made a compensation order, and we therefore now turn to the submissions advanced on those matters.

[11] In relation to the custodial sentences Mr Moll readily conceded that the offences to which the appellant had pleaded guilty were serious ones. However, he reminded us that the appellant had made full admissions at the stage of his arrest; that he was only 19 years of age at the time; that he had a very limited record of previous offending, and has not previously served a custodial sentence; that he is in full-time employment, and is currently a self-employed joiner; and that the Social Enquiry Report presents a positive picture. Mr Moll also advised us that the appellant has now moved away from a peer group which was likely to lead him into anti-social behaviour. Taking all of those matters into account, it was submitted, the sheriff could, and should, have selected a non-custodial alternative, and in particular should have imposed a community service order on the appellant.

[12] In his report to this Court the sheriff has made it clear that he did consider the alternative of community service. However, he has told us that there appears to be what he calls "a plague of thefts of quad bikes" from farms within the area served by Ayr Sheriff Court; and he has also drawn our attention to the fact that the offences which are the subjects of this appeal clearly involved an amount of planning - particularly the offence libelled in charge 4. He goes on to say:

"In order that the appellant understood the seriousness of this matter, and given the value of the un-recovered vehicle in the second charge, and also to discourage others who believe that there are easy pickings to be made by stealing these from farms I took the view the matter was so serious that only a custodial sentence would be appropriate and there was no other appropriate way of dealing with the case."

[13] In our opinion the sheriff has given careful consideration to all of the relevant factors in this case, and we are unable to say that the selection of custodial sentences was, in the whole circumstances, outwith the range of the discretion available to him in a case such as this. We accordingly reject this ground of appeal. So far as the length of the custodial sentences is concerned it is our view that the sheriff's approach cannot be faulted. He has distinguished between charge 2, where there was no recovery of the vehicle, and charge 4 where, albeit fortuitously, the vehicle in question was recovered. In both cases, however, he has discounted by one third the sentence which he would otherwise have imposed in order to take account of the early stage at which the appellant offered pleas of guilty. That was an entirely appropriate discount in the circumstances. In the result, we consider that the sheriff was entitled to impose custodial sentences, and that the lengths of those sentences are not open to challenge.

[14] We now turn to the compensation order which was imposed as an additional penalty in respect of charge 2. At the outset Mr Moll accepted - correctly, in our opinion - that it is competent to impose a compensation order in addition to any other penalty (1995 Act, s. 249(1); Collins v Lowe 1990 SCCR 605). However, Mr Moll submitted that in the whole circumstances, and in particular having regard to the appellant's means, the sheriff had erred in making the compensation order.

[15] The position in relation to the appellant's means is, we think, less than wholly clear. The sheriff has told us in his report that he was informed that the appellant was willing to make compensation to the owner of the quad bike, and he goes on to state that he was advised that the appellant's father would make £2,000 available with the balance of the compensation being paid by the appellant. It is clear that all of this strongly influenced the sheriff towards the making of the compensation order which he ultimately imposed. However, the Social Enquiry Report which was before the sheriff paints a very different picture. It states that, at the time when the report was written, the appellant had around £10 per week at his disposal and had no savings. Before this Court Mr Moll sought to confirm that the appellant has very limited means, and would be quite unable to pay a compensation order, particularly of the amount ordered in the present case. He suggested that the sheriff might have misunderstood what was said to him regarding the availability of funds to meet a compensation order.

[16] It is unfortunate that there should be this conflict between, on the one hand, what appears to have been said to the sheriff and, on the other hand, what is stated in the Social Enquiry Report and what has now been confirmed to us by Mr Moll. It occurs to us, however, that what appears to have been said to the sheriff may have been said - somewhat rashly in the circumstances - in a misguided attempt to persuade the sheriff to deal with the case by the imposition of a compensation order rather than by the imposition of a custodial sentence; and it may not have been contemplated that the sheriff would ultimately decide to deal with the case by the imposition of custodial sentences and a compensation order.

[17] Be that as it may, we consider that we are bound to approach this part of the sheriff's sentence on the basis that the appellant simply did not have, at the time of sentence, the means to pay a compensation order, particularly of the amount determined by the sheriff. In that connection we note that section 249(5) of the 1995 Act echoes the provision in relation to fines by providing:

"In determining whether to make a compensation order ... and in determining the amount to be paid ... the court shall take into consideration his means so far as known to the court."

We also note that the following subsection provides:

"For the purposes of subsection (5) above, in assessing the means of a person who is serving, or is to serve, a period of imprisonment or detention, no account shall be taken of earnings contingent upon his obtaining employment after release."

[18] Accepting, as we think we must, what was said in the Social Enquiry Report regarding the appellant's means, and what was reiterated by Mr Moll in his submissions to this Court, we consider that a compensation order should not have been made in this case, particularly when it was imposed in addition to a custodial sentence.

[19] In the whole circumstances, therefore, we shall refuse this appeal in so far as it is directed against the custodial sentences imposed by the sheriff. However, we shall allow the appeal in so far as it is directed against the compensation order which was imposed in respect of charge 2 in the complaint, and we shall quash that order.


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