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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> McDonagh v. Procurator Fiscal, Paisley [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_61 (18 October 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_61.html
Cite as: 2008 JC 125, 2007 SLT 1239, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_61, [2007] HCJAC 61, 2007 SCCR 482, 2007 GWD 34-578

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Osborne

Lord Johnston

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] HCJAC61

Appeal Nos: XJ 292/07 and XJ294/07

 

 

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

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

 

in

 

APPEALS BY BILLS OF SUSPENSION

 

in causis

 

DAVID MICHAEL McDONAGH

Complainer;

 

against

 

SCOTT PATTISON,

Procurator Fiscal, Paisley,

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

 

 

Appellant: Ogg, Solicitor Advocate; Balfour + Manson LLP

Respondent: Bolland, QC, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

18 September 2007

 

Background

[1] On 22 November 2006 a sheriff at Paisley Sheriff Court was invited by the Procurator Fiscal there to grant what are commonly known as "initiating warrants" in two complaints against the present complainer. In terms of section 139(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 a judge of a court in which a complaint is brought has power, on the motion of the prosecutor, "to grant warrant to apprehend the accused where this appears to the judge expedient". This is an alternative to citation by other means such as citation by post or delivery by an officer of law at an accused person's dwelling house. The consequence of proceeding by way of an "initiating warrant" is that an accused person may be arrested and brought to court to answer a charge rather than merely being required to respond to a citation which has been brought to his or her attention by more informal means. Quite often, as we understand it, the commencement of summary proceedings by means of an initiating warrant takes place when an accused person's whereabouts are unknown, or where the prosecutor is anxious to commence proceedings in order to avoid the automatic operation of a statutory time bar, though, in that latter case, the sheriff concerned will normally be advised that the warrant, if granted, will not be put into effect unless absolutely necessary.

[2] In the present cases the Procurator Fiscal at Paisley, in the latter part of 2006, prepared two complaints against the complainer. One of those, (no. XJ292/07), contains two charges, namely that, on 14 July 2006 the complainer committed a breach of the peace and, on the same day, and at the same locus, committed an offence constituting a contravention of section 41(1)(a) of the Police (Scotland) Act 1967. The other complaint, (no. XJ294/07), contains a single charge to the effect that "between 1 August 2005 and 13 July 2006 [the complainer] being a person subject to the notification requirements of Part II of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 did fail within the period of one year [to supply certain information to the police] contrary to the Sexual Offences Act 2003, section 85(1) and (2) and section 91(1)(a)". On 20 November 2006 the Procurator Fiscal sent both of these complaints, each with an accompanying letter, to "The Sheriff, Paisley Sheriff Court". Given that there are a number of sheriffs resident at Paisley Sheriff Court, we assume that these communications were probably directed via the sheriff clerk's office on the assumption that they would then be passed to whichever sheriff happened to be available at the time in question. Be that as it may, the letters are in identical terms. They state that "A warrant is requested for the above named for the reasons undernoted. I would be grateful if you would grant the warrant." Below the signature of the Procurator Fiscal Depute who signed the letters there is in each case an "Undernote" in the following terms:

"1. Accused is considered by police to be a high risk sex offender - nature of allegation is such to [sic] suggest that he will not voluntarily answer a citation."

[3] These letters, and the accompanying complaints, were put before Sheriff Douglas in chambers on 22 November 2006 and, in reliance on what was said in the letters from the Procurator Fiscal Depute, he signed the warrants authorising the apprehension of the complainer and the search of his person, dwellinghouse and repositories. In due course the warrants were executed, and the complainer appeared in custody to answer the charges in the two complaints. The complainer now challenges these warrants in the present Bills of Suspension, and he asserts, in each case, that "the sheriff's decision to grant the said pretended warrant as craved being unjust, erroneous and contrary to law" the warrant in question should be suspended simpliciter. Having heard Ms Ogg, the solicitor advocate for the complainer, and the Advocate depute in reply, we passed both Bills, and suspended the warrants as craved. We also indicated that our reasons for doing so would be given in writing later. This Opinion sets out those reasons.

 

The submissions for the parties

[4] Essentially, the basis for the Bills of Suspension (which are in identical terms) is that the complainer has previously been proceeded against by the Procurator Fiscal at Paisley in respect of the same, or similar, charges, and has on all occasions appeared in court voluntarily whether in response to a citation or in response to having been ordained to do so by the court. Against that background, it is said, there was no basis in fact for the respondent's depute to claim in the letters which have been mentioned above that the "nature of the allegation is such as to suggest that [the complainer] will not voluntarily answer a citation"; and in those circumstances the warrants granted by the sheriff are fundamentally flawed since they were granted on the basis of inadequate and misleading information.

[5] The precise history of events leading up to the applications for the warrants in question is not easily understood from what is narrated in the Bills of Suspension. However, on the basis of the explanations which were given by Ms Ogg, the solicitor advocate for the complainer, the factual background appears to be as follows. In 2005 the complainer was charged with an offence under sections 85 and 91 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003. That charge was in identical terms to the charge presently before this Court (no. XJ294/07) save that the specified period of failure was from 13 April 2005 to 1 July 2005. The complaint containing that charge was brought to the complainer's notice by conventional citation and, in response, he attended a pleading diet on 16 November 2005. On that date, a diet of debate was assigned for 7 December 2005, and the complainer was ordained to attend on that date. He duly did so. On 7 December 2005 the case was continued for trial on 27 March 2006 with an intermediate diet fixed for 19 January 2006. Without any need for compulsion the complainer attended court on both of these occasions. On the date of the trial, however, the procurator fiscal depute moved that the complaint should be deserted pro loco et tempore, and that was duly done.

[6] The next chapter in this narrative of events began on Friday 14 July 2006 when the complainer was arrested by the police on the charges which form the basis of one of the complaints now before us (no. XJ292/07). These are the charges of breach of the peace and a contravention of the Police (Scotland) Act 1967 allegedly committed on 14 July 2006. The complainer was detained in police custody over the weekend, and appeared from custody at Paisley Sheriff Court on Monday, 17 July 2006. At that stage there was served on him a complaint containing the charges of breach of the peace and contravention of section 41(1)(a) of the Police (Scotland) Act 1967 and a further complaint alleging a contravention of sections 85 and 91 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003. Once again, that charge was in identical terms to the charge in one of the Bills of Suspension before us save that, in the complaint served on 17 July 2006, the specified period of failure was from 1 to 13 July 2006. On 17 July 2006, both of the complaints before the court were continued without plea until 7 August 2006, and the complainer was released on bail. He duly attended court on 7 August and tendered pleas of not guilty. Both complaints were continued for trial on 6 and 7 November 2006 with intermediate diets being assigned for 24 October 2006. The complainer attended court for the intermediate diets, and he attended again for trial on 6 November. On that day, however, the complaint containing the charge under the Sexual Offences Act 2003 was not called by the procurator fiscal depute, and accordingly it fell. On the following day, when again the complainer attended court, the trial on the complaint containing the charges of breach of the peace and a contravention of the Police (Scotland) Act commenced. However, midway through the trial the procurator fiscal depute moved for, and was granted, desertion of the proceedings pro loco et tempore. The next chapter in the narrative of events was the commencement, by means of initiating warrants, of the proceedings which have given rise to the current Bills of Suspension.

[7] As can be seen from the foregoing narrative, the complainer has now been the subject of virtually identical proceedings in respect of an alleged contravention of the reporting provisions in the Sexual Offences Act 2003 on three separate occasions, and of wholly identical proceedings in respect of charges of breach of the peace and a contravention of the Police (Scotland) Act 1967 on two separate occasions. Apart from the current proceedings which were commenced by the initiating warrants which are the subject of the present Bills of Suspension, all previous proceedings have been terminated by the Crown either on the basis of desertion pro loco et tempore or, in one instance, by not calling the case at all. What is of particular significance is that on all previous occasions the complainer has attended court voluntarily in response to conventional citation, or in response to being ordained to do so by the court, and has absolutely no history of previous failures to attend court on a voluntary basis. Of course, he appeared in court in custody on 17 July 2007, but that had nothing to do with a failure to appear voluntarily: and, having been immediately granted bail on that occasion, he continued to attend court voluntarily thereafter.

[8] In light of the foregoing facts, Ms Ogg submitted that the initiating warrants in the present cases, while ex facie valid, are fundamentally flawed since they were granted by the sheriff on the basis of, and in reliance on, a statement in the procurator fiscal depute's letter which was grossly inaccurate and misleading. In those circumstances she invited us to pass the Bills and to suspend the warrants complained of.

[9] In response, the Advocate depute made no attempt to challenge the factual narrative which had been explained, and founded on, by Ms Ogg. He submitted, however, that since effect had already been given to the warrants granted by the sheriff with the consequence that proceedings on the complaints in question are now progressing at Paisley Sheriff Court, there is no longer anything to suspend. He went on to submit that, in those circumstances, the correct way to proceed is by a plea in bar of trial on the grounds of oppression; and, in that connection, he advised us that such a plea has already been tabled, and is to be heard by the sheriff at Paisley on 25 January 2008. For the foregoing reasons, the Advocate depute invited us to refuse to pass the Bills.

 

Discussion and decision

[10] We must begin this part of our Opinion by making it clear that we do not agree with the Advocate depute's submission to the effect that there is nothing that can be suspended once an initiating warrant, however defective it may be, has actually been put into effect. Were that to be the case, it is probable that an initiating arrest warrant could never be suspended since the first that an accused person will know about it is when he is arrested by the police and taken to court in custody - in other words, after the warrant has been put into effect. We consider that a warrant can properly be challenged at a later stage; and, if it is found to be fundamentally defective, it can then be suspended with, of course, the consequence that any proceedings which have followed from it will be fundamentally null and void. Nor do we agree with the Advocate depute that the proper way of dealing with the matter is by a plea in bar of trial on the grounds of oppression. Obviously, we have no means of knowing what arguments might be advanced were such a plea to be argued in the present cases. We suspect, however, that much of the argument might be addressed to the fact that the complainer has already been proceeded against to no avail on several previous occasions on charges which are either wholly identical or very similar. That, of course, would be a line of argument which had nothing to do with the validity of the warrants which commenced the present proceedings; and, indeed, we doubt whether a challenge to the validity of the warrants could competently be taken in the court of first instance. In our opinion, the appropriate way of presenting such a challenge is by means of suspension procedure in this Court; and for that reason we consider that we can competently deal with that matter by virtue of the Bills which are presently before us.

[11] In his Report to this Court in respect of the Bills the sheriff who signed the warrants in question has told us that it is normal practice at Paisley Sheriff Court for warrants to be applied for in the manner which we have described above, and without the need for any personal appearance by the Procurator Fiscal or one of his deputes. We suspect that similar procedures are in place in all sheriff courts around the country. In that connection, the sheriff in the present cases has said:

"If the narrative in the Bill of Suspension is correct, it was incumbent on the Procurator Fiscal to make full disclosure of the whole circumstances of the case. The issue of a warrant to arrest a citizen is one of the most serious of matters. Such warrants are not granted lightly..... It is essential therefore for the maintenance of good order and to meet its obligation to the Court that the Crown make full disclosure in written applications to the Court of all material considerations known to it. Not to do so is likely to lead to injustice and to bring the whole chambers procedure for initiating warrants into disrepute."

[12] We entirely agree with these observations. Given the nature of the unchallenged narrative of earlier proceedings which is set out in the Bills, and which was further explained to us by Ms Ogg, and given in particular that throughout those proceedings there is not a single instance when the complainer failed to attend court after being cited or ordained to do so, it is abundantly clear that the Undernote which was attached to the letters from the Procurator Fiscal to the sheriff was wholly inaccurate and misleading. We are unable to say whether this was done deliberately or as a result of carelessness and incompetence; but, however it came about, there can be no doubt, in our opinion, that the consequence was that the sheriff was seriously misled, and was persuaded to grant warrants which he would not, and should not, have granted if he had been in possession, as he should have been, of the relevant background facts. In the whole circumstances we are of opinion that the submissions which were advanced in support of the Bills are well founded, and we have accordingly passed the Bills and suspended the initiating warrants which were granted by the sheriff on 22 November 2006.

 


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