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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Voudouri & Anor v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_34 (02 July 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2008/HCJAC_34.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_34, 2008 JC 431, 2008 SLT 746, 2008 SCCR 736, 2008 GWD 25-390, [2008] HCJAC 34

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Eassie

Lord Mackay of Drumadoon

Lord Coulsfield

 

 

[2008] HCJAC34

Appeal Nos: XC899/06 & XC898/06

 

OPINION OF LORD EASSIE

 

in

 

(1) APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE

 

by

 

MICHAEL GEORGE VOUDOURI

Appellant;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

 

and

 

(2) APPEAL

 

by

 

TRUST UNION LLC

First Minuter;

 

in the Petition of

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

 

against

 

MICHAEL GEORGE VOUDOURI

Respondent;

 

and

 

TRUST UNION LLC AND OTHERS

Minuters

_______

 

Act: Belmonte, Solicitor Advocate; Belmonte & Co (for Appellant)

Act: Targowski QC et Ms M Hughes; Trainor Alston, Coatbridge (for First Minuter)

Alt: Di Rollo QC et B Divers; Crown Agent

 

2 July 2008

 

[1] These appeals are concerned with a confiscation order made by the sentencing judge under Section 1 of the Proceeds of Crime (Scotland) Act 1995 - "the Act" - subsequent to the appellant, Michael George Voudouri, having pled guilty to a contravention of Section 72(1) of the Value Added Tax Act 1994. The circumstances of the case; the material parts of the legislation; and the relevant passages of the Opinion delivered by the sentencing judge following the proof heard by him in respect of the prosecutor's statement, the answers thereto and the minutes lodged by the minuters, are all set out by Lord Coulsfield in his Opinion to which I gratefully refer.

[2] The central issue at the proof before the sentencing judge was whether the house in which Mr Voudouri and his family were living fell within the relevant "realisable property", as defined in the Act, for the purposes of the making of the confiscation order. Putting matters very shortly, the title to the house is held by the minuter Trust Union LLC, a company incorporated in the state of Delaware, the sole shareholder in which at the time of the proof was Mr Voudouri's father-in-law, Mr Nikolas Savva. The missives for the purchase of the house were concluded in the name of Trust Union, the matter being negotiated by Mr Voudouri who held a power of attorney from Trust Union granted some time before the negotiation of the missives. Mr Savva lived in another dwelling in the locality owned by his daughter, Mrs Voudouri, but it was accepted that the dwelling had been bought for Mrs Voudouri by her husband and, as a gift by him, fell within the concept of the realisable property. The case advanced by the Crown before the sentencing judge as respects the house did not however proceed upon the basis that the house represented a gift by the offender, Mr Voudouri, to Trust Union which was thus "caught" by the provisions of Section 5 of the Act. The case for the Crown proceeded solely on the basis of Section 4(1)(c) of the Act.

[3] The terms of Section 4 are set out by Lord Coulsfield in his Opinion but for convenience I quote here the terms of the Section 4(1).

"(1) In this Act 'realisable property' means, subject to sub-section (2) below -

(a) the whole estate wherever situated of a person -

(i) against whom proceedings have been instituted for an offence to which this Part of this Act applies; or

(ii) in respect of whom a restraint order has been made by virtue of Section 29(3) of this Act;

(b) the whole estate wherever situated of a person to whom any person whose whole estate is realisable by virtue of paragraph (a) above has (directly or indirectly and whether in one transaction or in a series of transactions) made a gift caught by this part of this Act, or as the case may be, an implicated gift;

(c) any other property in the possession or under the control of a person mentioned in paragraph (a) or (b) above; and

(d) any income or estate vesting in a person mentioned in a paragraph (a) or (b) above."

Since paragraph (a) embraces the "whole estate" of the person against whom the criminal proceedings have been instituted, or against whom a restraint order has been made (a restraint order may be made in respect of a person against whom it is proposed to institute criminal proceedings - see Section 29(3) of the Act) and since paragraph (b) similarly embraces the "whole estate" of the donee of a gift, it follows that paragraph (c) can only be concerned with property owned by a third party who has given possession or control of it, as the case may be, to either the person subject to the prosecution or restraint order or to the donee in question. We were referred to certain passages in volume 1 of the report by the Scottish Law Commission which preceded enactment of the Act - Scot Law Com No. 147 Report on Confiscation and Forfeiture. From these passages it is apparent that the Scottish Law Commission intended a very broad definition of realisable property, which might indeed embrace property owned by such a third party. Thus, largely in the context of interim measures in the form of the proposal for restraint orders, at paragraph 4.9 the Commission says:

"A restraint order may have to be made as a matter of urgency where the risk of the disappearance of property reasonably believed to be the proceeds of crime is so great that its immediate preservation is necessary pending detailed investigations. Indeed in certain circumstances it may be necessary to make a restraint order even before proceedings have been brought. In such cases time may well not permit a careful appreciation of exactly how much of the property in the possession or under the control of the alleged offender lawfully belongs to him. Secondly, in cases where the benefit he has obtained in connection with the offence is reasonably estimated to exceed the value of his assets, the policy of depriving him of any benefit from his crime appears to require that as much property as possible should be made available to satisfy a confiscation order. Thirdly, it is necessary to prevent an offender from evading a confiscation order by disposing of assets before a restraint order is made. The definition should therefore extend to a person to whom the offender has made a gift; and, to take account of urgent situations, it should comprehend not only the recipient's own property but also any property in his possession or under his control."

[4] However it is also clear that the Scottish Law Commission did not have in mind that the innocent third party owner should suffer loss. In the succeeding paragraph, paragraph 4.10 the Commission states:

"We should say at once, however, that although we propose that 'realisable property' should be defined in broad terms, it seems to us most unlikely that the property of an innocent third party would be used to satisfy a confiscation order."

The Commission then goes on to discuss certain practical ways in which the property may not remain within the control of the offender, and the possibility of application being made to vary a restraint order.

[5] In my view it can hardly have been the legislative intention that an innocent third party should be deprived of his property, simply because it was in the possession or control of either the offender or someone to whom the offender had made a gift "caught" by the Act. For example the offender or the donee might be the tenant of a house, or the hirer of a car or other item of corporeal moveable property. But, in its terms, Section 4(1)(c) would embrace that owner's property simply by virtue of the fact that it was in the possession or control of the offender or the donee. So the search must be directed to identifying the means whereby the statute mitigates the effect of Section 4(1)(c) by providing the necessary protection for the third party.

[6] Running through much of the submissions for the appellants was the assumption that such protection could and should be given at the stage of assessing the realisable property and making the confiscation order. For a time I wondered whether it might be possible to find some means of distinguishing "realisable property" at the preliminary and interim stages, which involve the making of a restraint order by the civil court, from the concept of "realisable property" at the stage at which the sentencing court has to assess its amount. I have however come to the conclusion that one cannot give to the definition of "realisable property" different meanings depending upon whether the civil court is engaged at an interim stage or the criminal court is engaged at the sentencing stage. My conclusion in this respect receives confirmation from examining volume 2 of the Commission's report which contains the draft Bill; the equivalent clause to Section 4 of the Act is in all respects identical. The explanatory notes to the Bill make plain that in the context of what is now Section 4(1)(c) no different interpretation of this paragraph of Section 4(1) is contemplated. In other words, in the scheme of this legislation, third party protection does not enter into the assessment of the "realisable property".

[7] The term "confiscation order" employed in the Act has a possible tendency to mislead insofar as it might initially suggest the taking away of specific assets. But in truth a confiscation order made under the Act does not in itself appropriate ownership of any assets. No property is escheat to the Crown. A confiscation order is essentially an additional monetary penalty upon the offender. Unless an administration order is made, the means of enforcement of that penalty is assimilated to a fine by virtue of Section 14 of the Act, which, subject to certain modifications, applies the provisions of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 relating to fines.

[8] The making of a confiscation order has possible effect against the property of the third party (entering into the notion of realisable property in terms of Section 4(1)(c)) only if an administrator is appointed in terms of Section 34 of and Schedule 1 to the Act. The provisions of the Act respecting administration orders are perhaps not the most lucid and straightforward. But (setting aside the position in respect of forfeiture orders with which one is not concerned in the present case) the appointment of an administrator may be made only as respects property subject to a restraint order (paragraph 1of Schedule 1). Provision is made by Section 31 of the Act for any person having an interest, or the prosecutor, to apply to the civil court for variation or recall of a restraint order. Further, a restraint order subsists, in the circumstances of the present case, and in terms of Section 29(6)(f), until the confiscation order "is satisfied (whether by payment of the amount due under the order or by the accused serving imprisonment in default)". So, in the event of the property of the third party being subject to a restraint order, the third party owner may seek release in the civil court, notwithstanding the conviction of the offender, until such time as the confiscation order has been satisfied. As Lord Coulsfield points out, Section 16(4) makes clear that, in addition to those other steps which the third party may take, the administrator's powers must be exercised compatibly with the interests of the third party owner. It may also be noted that paragraph 10 of Schedule 1 makes provision for the possibility of compensation being paid to the owner, if his property has been realised by the administrator.

[9] So, put shortly, although the provisions in the Act respecting the protection of the third party owner of property coming within the terms of the "possession or control" part of the definition of realisable property in terms of Section 4(1)(c) may not be immediately obvious, a reading of the whole Act enables them to be discerned. I therefore conclude that, as respects the determination of the extent of the realisable property in the present case, the decision of the sentencing judge cannot be faulted. The contention before him was essentially that only the owner of an asset could have control of it and accordingly Mr Voudouri, not being its owner, could not be in control of the house. A submission to similar effect was also advanced to us at one stage in the argument. I reject that contention. Apart from the fact that, as the sentencing judge points out, Section 4(1)(c) refers to "possession or control" (emphasis added), if ownership were the determinative factor in that "control", all would be covered by the preceding paragraphs which embrace the whole estate of the persons in question and paragraph (c) would be otiose. For the reasons already indicated I consider that issues of third party protection do not arise at the stage of determining the amount of the realisable property under this legislative scheme and in my view the sentencing judge properly applied the statutory definition.

[10] In these circumstances the appeal by Trust Union LLC must be refused. And given that the sentencing judge has correctly applied the definition of "realisable property" I do not consider that he can be said to have erred in making a confiscation order of an equivalent amount. It was agreed that the total amount by which the appellant Mr Voudouri had benefited from his crime amounted to £3,041,114.07, thus greatly exceeding the amount by which the Crown was able to identify as realisable property. In light of the amount of that benefit and the other circumstances disclosed to him, the sentencing judge considered that it would be reasonable to infer that the ultimate source of the funds for the purchase of the house was Mr Voudouri. It was not submitted that such an inference could not properly be drawn and no evidence was led at the proof by either appellant to rebut that inference by demonstrating that the funds for the purchase of the house had a source other than the benefit flowing from Mr Voudouri's criminal activities. In these circumstances, and for the reasons indicated by Lord Coulsfield, I consider that the appeal by Mr Voudouri should also be refused.

[11] I accordingly move your Lordships to refuse these appeals.

 

 


APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Eassie

Lord Mackay of Drumadoon

Lord Coulsfield

 

 

[2008] HCJAC34

Appeal Nos: XC899/06 & XC898/06

 

OPINION OF LORD MACKAY OF DRUMADOON

 

in

 

(1) APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE

 

by

 

MICHAEL GEORGE VOUDOURI

Appellant;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

 

and

 

(2) APPEAL

 

by

 

TRUST UNION LLC

First Minuter;

 

in the Petition of

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

 

against

 

MICHAEL GEORGE VOUDOURI

Respondent;

 

and

 

TRUST UNION LLC AND OTHERS

Minuters

_______

 

Act: Belmonte, Solicitor Advocate; Belmonte & Co (for Appellant)

Act: Targowski QC et Ms M Hughes; Trainor Alston, Coatbridge (for First Minuter)

Alt: Di Rollo QC et B Divers; Crown Agent

 

2 July 2008

 

[12] I agree with your Lordship in the chair that for the reasons set out in your Opinion and in the Opinion of Lord Coulsfield these appeals should be refused.

[13] As Lord Coulsfield points out in his Opinion, the need to realise the property at 34 Kenilworth Road, Bridge of Allan will only arise if the confiscation order made against the appellant remains unsatisfied. In that event it would be for the administrator appointed under the provisions of schedule 1 to the 1995 Act to realise the property.  If the administrator required to do so, it would be at that stage that any rights and interests of third parties, such as the first minuter, could be taken into account and resolved (see Regina v Ahmed and Another, [2005] 1 WLR 122, and In re Norris [2001] 1 WLR 1388).   

 

 


APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Eassie

Lord Mackay of Drumadoon

Lord Coulsfield

 

 

[2008] HCJAC34

Appeal Nos: XC899/06 & XC898/06

 

OPINION OF LORD COULSFIELD

 

in

 

 

(1) APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE

 

by

 

MICHAEL GEORGE VOUDOURI

Appellant;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

 

and

 

(2) APPEAL

 

by

 

TRUST UNION LLC

First Minuter;

 

in the Petition of

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

 

against

 

MICHAEL GEORGE VOUDOURI

Respondent;

 

and

 

TRUST UNION LLC AND OTHERS

Minuters

_______

Act: Belmonte, Solicitor Advocate; Belmonte & Co (for Appellant)

Act: Targowski QC et Ms M Hughes; Trainor Alston, Coatbridge (for First Minuter)

Alt: Di Rollo QC et B Divers; Crown Agent

 

2 July 2008

 

[14] The appellant, Michael George Voudouri, pled guilty on 11 May 2004 to a contravention of Section 72(1) of the Value Added Tax Act 1994. This charge was, in substance, one of fraudulent evasion of value added tax carried out by means of a complex scheme known as a carousel fraud. On 8 June 2004, Voudouri was sentenced to 4 years imprisonment. On the same day, the Lord Advocate served on him a statement under Section 9 of the Proceeds of Crime (Scotland) Act 1995 specifying various items of property which were claimed to be the proceeds of the appellant's criminal conduct, and which were also described as realisable property. The Lord Advocate sought an order for confiscation of all the items of heritable and moveable property specified in the statement. The motion for confiscation was opposed by the appellant, who lodged answers. In addition, minutes were lodged on behalf of Trust Union LLC and of the appellant's wife and daughters. For the purposes of this appeal, we are only concerned with one item of property, a heritable property at 34 Kenilworth Road, Bridge of Allan, Stirling, the title to which is held in the name of Trust Union LLC.

[15] A proof was held on the prosecutor's statement and the answers. It was agreed that the total amount of the benefit to the appellant from the fraudulent evasion of VAT was £3,041,114.07. It was further agreed that his realisable assets, apart from the property at 34 Kenilworth Road, amounted to £392,942.34. The property at Kenilworth Road was valued at £900,000, and, having heard the proof, the judge held that that property should be included among the appellant's realisable assets and made an order in favour of the Lord Advocate requiring the appellant to pay the sum of £1,292,942.34, in terms of Section 1(1) of the Proceeds of Crime (Scotland) Act 1995. Both the appellant and the first minuter have appealed against that decision.

[16] Section 1 of the 1995 Act empowers the court to make a confiscation order requiring a convicted person to pay such sum as the court thinks fit subject to the condition, set out in sub-section 6, that in the case of an offence which is not a drug trafficking offence, the sum must not exceed the lesser of the benefit from the commission of the offence, and the amount that might be realised at the time the order is made. Realisable property is defined in Section 4 which provides:

"(1) In this Act 'realisable property' means, subject to sub-section (2) below -

(a) the whole estate wherever situated of a person -

(i) against whom proceedings have been instituted for an offence to which this part of this Act applies; or

(ii) in respect of whom a restraint order had been made by virtue of Section 29(3) of this Act;

(b) the whole estate wherever situated of a person to whom any person whose whole estate is realisable by virtue of paragraph (a) above has (directly or indirectly and whether in one transaction or in a series of transactions) made a gift caught by this part of this Act, or as the case may be, an implicative gift;

(c) any property in the possession or under the control of a person mentioned in paragraph (a) or (b) above; and

(d) any income or estate vesting in a person mentioned in paragraph (a) or (b) above.

(2) Property is not realisable if -

(a) held on trust by a person mentioned in sub-section (1)(a) or (b) above for a person not so mentioned;

(b) a suspended forfeiture order is in force in respect of the property; or

(c) it is, for the time being, subject to a restraint order made in respect of other proceedings.

(3) For the purposes of this part of this Act the amount that might be realised at the time a confiscation order is made in respect of a person is -

(a) in relation to an offence which is not a drug trafficking offence, subject to Section 7(5) of this Act, the total value at that time of all his realisable property, and of all gifts caught by this Part which have been made by him, less any amount due by him at that time in respect of any compensation order under Section 249 of the 1995 Act made before the confiscation order; and

(b) in relation to a drug trafficking offence the total value at that time of all his realisable property and all implicative gifts which have been made by him.

(4) In assessing the value of realisable property (other than money) of a person in respect of whom it proposes to make a confiscation order, the court shall have regard to the likely market value of the property at the date on which the order would be made; but it may also have regard to any security or real burden which would require to be discharged in realising the property or to any other factors which might reduce the amount recoverable by such realisation."

[17] Sub-sections 5 and 6 of Section 4, deal with the effect of sequestration or bankruptcy procedure and with implicative gifts and are not relevant to this appeal. The Act contains provisions, in Section 28 and following, concerning the making of restraint orders, the effect of which is to prevent a person dealing with property covered by the order, and with the variation and recall of such orders. Section 34 provides that Schedule 1 of the Act is to have effect as regards the appointment of administrators under the Act and Schedule 1 inter alia empowers the court, where a confiscation order has been made, to appoint a person to realise the property in accordance with the court's directions and confers various further rights and powers on any person so appointed, subject to the direction of the court. Section 16 of the Act, which, in terms of sub-section 1, applies to the court's powers in relation to realisable property, provides, inter alia,

"(2) Subject to the following provisions of this section, the powers shall be exercised with a view to making available for satisfying the confiscation order, or as the case may be, any confiscation order that may be made in the case of a person mentioned in Section 4(1)(a) of this Act the value for the time being of realisable property held by any person by realisation of such property.

(3) In the case of realisable property held by a person by virtue only of having received a gift made directly or indirectly by the accused which is caught by this part of this Act, the powers shall be exercised with a view to realising no more than the value of the gift as assessed under Section 7 of this Act.

(4) The powers shall be exercised with a view to allowing any person other than a person mentioned in paragraph (a) and, in relation to a drug trafficking offence, paragraph (b) of Section 4(1) of this Act or the recipient of any such gift to retain or recover the value of any property held by him."

[18] The circumstances in which the property in issue was acquired and the title taken in favour of the first minuter are set out in detail in the judgment of the judge who heard the proof. The property, a former manse, was advertised at an upset price of £390,000 early in 2002. The appellant viewed the property and later put in an offer. The judge held that it was clear to the seller's solicitors that, in their understanding, they were dealing with him personally in his attempt to buy the property. At a later stage, however the appellant told the solicitors that he would be making an offer on behalf of the first minuter. On 25 February 2002 an offer to purchase the property for £600,000 was received in the name of the first minuter. The seller's solicitors sought and received confirmation from the solicitors who made the offer that the offer was the same as that which they had been discussing with the appellant. Again, the judge found that while the offer was in the name of the first minuter, the seller's solicitors continued to be of the understanding that the offer came from the appellant. This was confirmed by a letter from the solicitors acting in the purchase to the seller's solicitors enclosing the principal disposition for signature which designated the appellant as the purchasing client. Further letters written in the course of carrying out the purchase were to the same effect. Evidence was given by Mr Moffat, a partner in the firm of solicitors acting for the purchaser, that the appellant was, throughout, the client for whom they were acting, and this was confirmed by his files. The disposition delivered to the purchasing solicitors was dated 21 March 2002 and the title was disposed in favour of the first minuter, who were described as being incorporated in the State of Delaware and having a registered office there. The instructions continued to be given by the appellant but at some stage the solicitors became aware that there was in existence a power of attorney by the first minuter in favour of the appellant. This document bore to have been granted on 21 January 2002 and gave the appellant wide powers of management.

[19] After the delivery of the disposition, the appellant took up residence in the house, with his wife and daughters. Subsequently, on 15 September 2004, he paid for buildings and contents insurance in the sum of £3,080.11. There was no other evidence about any financial arrangements which may have existed between the appellant and the first minuter. It is also part of the findings that in 2000, before the purchase of 35 Kenilworth Road, the appellant had purchased a property in Alloa. In this case the title had been taken in favour of the appellant's wife and the purchase price was £74,000. It was accepted in these proceedings, however, that that property fell to be included in the appellant's realisable property at a value of £130,000. It appears to be presently occupied by Mr Nicholas Savva, who is the appellant's father-in-law.

[20] On 10 September 2004, letters of request were issued to the competent authorities in the USA seeking assistance in investigation of the appellant's money laundering activities and in particular seeking assistance in regard to any documentation concerning the first minuter. By letter dated 3 March 2005 from the US Department of Justice, it was made clear that the law of the State of Delaware places only limited requirements on corporations registered there in regard to the provision of information about their activities. Such a corporation must have a registered office and appoint a registered agent but need not specify the nature of its business nor supply any information about its principals, place of business or specific business activities. There is no requirement that the principals of any such corporation should ever visit Delaware and it is not normal for the agents for such corporations to have personal knowledge of the individuals involved in the business. The only information which became available about the first minuter indicated that, from 5 October 2001, Nicholas Savva was the principal officer and sole member of the first minuter. No trading records or accounts of this company were produced. The investigations carried out on behalf of the Lord Advocate further revealed that from 2001 to 2004, the appellant claimed that his only income in the UK was the sum of £4,000 yearly from property rental. Mr Nicholas Savva has made no income tax returns and has not made any application for tax credits during the same period and since 2001 has received only a retirement pension.

[21] Before the judge, the Crown and the opposing parties were in agreement that the issue as to making a compensation order had to be considered in five stages. The first, was to assess the amount of benefit to the appellant from his course of offending: the second, the amount of his realisable property: the third, the lower of these two amounts: the fourth, whether any disputed items should fall within the definition of realisable property: and the fifth, whether, if any asset fell within the definition of realisable property, the court should exercise its discretion to decide the amount of the value of the property which should be added to the total. Having set the scene in that way the judge said, at paragraph [18] of his report,

"Whether any disputed asset falls within the realisable property of an accused in any particular case depends upon the terms of Section 4(1) of the Act cited above. The terms of Section 4(1)(c) read together with Section 1(a) provide realisable property includes any (other) property in possession or under control of a person convicted, whether in solemn or summary proceedings. If therefore it is shown that the house at 34 Kenilworth Road was in the possession or control of the appellant at the time the prosecutor's statement was served on him, that house would be liable to confiscation."

[22] That approach was not challenged by the defence. The Crown accepted, further, that the onus of proof was on the Lord Advocate to establish that the house was under the possession and control of the appellant and that it was necessary to prove that proposition beyond reasonable doubt. I do not think it is necessary to rehearse the submissions of the parties before the judge. The effect sufficiently appears from the decision. The judge said,

"I came to the conclusion that in this matter the submission of the respondent was to be preferred. The position of the first minuter depended essentially on the question of ownership as the prime, and indeed sole, criterion for determining whether a particular asset should fall within the category of realisable assets. That is clearly not the case. The terms of the statute, and particularly those of Section 4(1) (c), define possession and control of an asset to be the determining characteristic of what should be included in the realisable property of an accused which is subject to confiscation. No mention is made of ownership. The principal reason for that is obvious. It would be the easiest of matters for those who have profited from criminal activities to transfer the proceeds of that activity into the ownership of another in order to avoid the confiscation process. On the other hand, the Act provides specifically that when assets remain under the control and possession of the offender, they can be recovered under the terms of the Act irrespective of the identity of the title holder of those assets. No doubt the identity of the title holder may be of significance, in one way or another, in many cases. However, essentially what the Act seeks to do is to allow the prosecutor to recover the proceeds of criminal behaviour, and not simply those assets which remain in the physical ownership of the criminal. It would be naive to assume that all such proceeds would remain in the nominal ownership of the criminal, and repugnant to idea of justice that criminals could put the proceeds of their activities completely outwith the prospect of recovery merely by transferring such assets to others. It is therefore entirely appropriate that the statute should seek to define possession and control as the determining factor in what can and cannot be recovered in the wake of criminal activities, rather than the question of ownership.

In the present case, there was no direct evidence before the court that the appellant laundered any of the proceeds of his criminal activities to any other party for the purpose of acquiring the property at Kenilworth Road. The money for this purchase, it was agreed, came from the appellant's father-in-law, who forwarded funds to the first minuter in circumstances which, as I understand the submissions by counsel for the first minuter, allowed Trust Union LLC to purchase the home in question. But even if it cannot be completely demonstrated that the purchase price for Kenilworth Road came directly from the appellant, the proven fact (which I find established beyond reasonable doubt) is that he had possession and control over this property, and that in itself justifies the conclusion that this property should fall within the appellant's realisable assets. It does not therefore matter that there is no manifest and direct link between the appellant and the provision of the purchase funds. The mere fact that possession and control of the property is proved in terms of the Act is sufficient to establish the link between the proceeds of criminal activity and the right of the prosecution to recover those proceeds."

[23] The judge went on to refer to the way in which the appellant had controlled the process of acquisition of the property, the extensive powers which he had under the power of attorney and the fact that he and his family had lived in the house and paid for the insurance. He said that there were no direct submissions against the claim that the appellant enjoyed possession of the house or exercised effective control and went on to repeat his conclusion that the requirements of Section 4(1)(c) of the Act were satisfied. He added that he was not in any event satisfied that he could agree with counsel for the first minuter that the evidence failed to demonstrate that the appellant had no link with the provision of the purchase price but this part of his judgment will be dealt with later.

[24] It is therefore clear that the whole proceedings before the judge, were conducted by the Crown on the basis that, if it was proved that any property was in the possession or under the control of the appellant, that property fell to be treated as realisable property and liable to be realised. The position of the Crown was that a question of ownership, if relevant at all at this stage of the proceedings, was relevant only in relation to the question who enjoyed possession or control. The same position was maintained by the Advocate Depute in the argument before us, coupled with the argument that it appeared from the circumstances proved that the whole transaction involving Mr Savva, the first minuter and the appellant himself was a sham and that the property was really the property of the appellant. The first minuter , on the other hand maintained that, on the facts proved, the first minuter was the owner of the property and that in consequence the judge should have exercised his discretion to exclude the property from the appellant's 'realisable property'. The appellant further argued that where the property title was held by another person, and no link to the appellant was proved sufficient to show that the property was truly his, the property was not 'realisable property'. Both the first minuter and the appellant submitted that it was essential that the property of an innocent third party should be protected from confiscation. In this case, it was not proved that the first minuter was not a genuine purchaser. There was no sufficient evidence that the property had been acquired with the proceeds of crime or laundered money. There had been evidence that the sum used to purchase the property had come from an account in a bank in Greece and that it was not proved that Mr Savva had no resources from which such a sum could have been provided. The Crown could have pressed its investigations further if it was intended to prove either that the transaction was a sham or that the money was truly that of the appellant.

[25] In order to resolve this dispute, it is necessary, in my opinion, to understand the scheme of the Act, which is at first sight somewhat obscure. It is, I think, important to note that the Act envisages a progress to the actual recovery of proceeds of crime in four stages. The first is the identification of the benefit to the accused. The second is the identification of the accused's realisable property, which includes all property in the possession or control of the accused, and is not limited either to property derived from criminal activity or to property in the ownership of the accused. The third stage is the fixing of the amount of a confiscation order, which, despite its name, does not in itself affect any property: it merely fixes the amount of the accused's liability (compare R v Muntaz Ahmed and Another [2005] 1 WLR 122). The final stage is the actual recovery of the sum fixed, by the appointment of an administrator if necessary. The Act does not prescribe any particular procedure for the protection of the rights of innocent third parties. It does make clear in Section 16(4) that those rights are to be protected, but the protection comes into play, in terms of the Act at the stage of actual recovery of the sum named in the confiscation order. That interpretation, in my view, makes reasonable sense, and is supported by the terms of the Scottish Law Commission Reprt N. 147, to which Lord Eassie has referred. The starting point is that the accused has been found guilty of criminal behaviour and held to have profited from it, in this case to a very substantial extent. The definition of realisable property is designed to sweep up all property which may represent the proceeds of that criminal activity. The provisions for restraint orders follow the same course, and are intended to prevent dissipation of the proceeds of crime. The court has a discretion in fixing the actual amount of the confiscation order, and once the amount has been fixed, the accused can be called on to pay it. It is only if the accused fails to pay that that the question of enforcement and thus of the actual realisation of property arises.

[26] If that analysis of the Act is correct, it follows, in my opinion, that the decision of the judge in this case was also correct. When the case was before the judge, the position was perhaps confused by a failure to distinguish clearly between the stages of the process to which I have referred, with the result that more attention was given to evidence which might bear on the true ownership of the property than was really necessary at that stage. In any event, the Crown had shown to the judge's satisfaction that the house was in the possession and control of the appellant and, in my view, it is clear that, in terms of the Act, that is sufficient to bring the property within the definition of realisable property. The value of the appellant's realisable property was well below the amount of the benefit to him of his fraudulent activities. The judge was accordingly entitled to hold that the house was part of the realisable property and to assess a confiscation order on that basis. It was argued in the appeal that the judge should have exercised his discretion to exclude the house from the realisable property of the appellant. It is not clear to me that the judge was asked to approach the issue as one of the exercise of discretion, but in any event it seems to me that the proper time to deal with issues as to the rights of third parties is the stage when action is being taken to realise the property. It is only at that stage that the rights of third parties are actually placed in jeopardy. It is always open to a party in the position of the appellant to repatriate some of the vast gains which he has obtained by fraud to meet his obligation to pay the amount of the confiscation order.

[27] It would not, I think, be appropriate to make any observations about the evidence which might bear on the question of ownership of the property or the genuineness of the purchase in the name of the first minuter. I would only remark, in view of some of the arguments advanced, that the question of the onus of proof in any proceedings which may follow if, for example, an administrator is appointed, seems to me to be an open one.

[28] In all the circumstances, in my opinion, these appeals should be refused.

 


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