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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Procurator Fiscal v. Cotton [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_8 (08 February 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2008/HCJAC_8.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_8, 2008 SCCR 272, [2008] HCJAC 8, 2008 GWD 6-106, [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_08

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Johnston

Lord Wheatley

Sheriff Principal Nicholson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2008] HCJAC 8

Appeal Nos: XJ1046/07

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD WHEATLEY

 

in

 

CROWN APPEAL

 

in STATED CASE

 

by

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, DUMFRIES

Appellant;

 

against

 

ALAN COTTON

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: A Mackay, A.D.; Crown Agent

Alt: Party

 

8 February 2008

 

[1] On 25 September 2006, police officers were carrying out speed checks on the A74(M) at Whicketthorn, Kirkpatrick Fleming using properly authorised equipment which was working correctly. They recorded a vehicle registered number SB05 WCY travelling southwards on the road at a speed of 87mph. The maximum permitted speed in terms of the relevant legislation for the vehicle on that stretch of road was 70mph. The respondent was the driver and registered keeper of the vehicle at the material time. Throughout his address has been as narrated in the instance.

[2] On 28 September 2006 the police sent out a notice of intended prosecution by recorded delivery to the respondent's registered address. This was not received by the respondent. Subsequent enquiries by the police with the Royal Mail revealed that the recorded delivery message had been lost by them before delivery. A complaint containing a charge of speeding under the relevant legislation was subsequently served on the respondent by the appellant, and in due course a trial was fixed for 12 July 2007 in the District Court of Dumfries and Galloway at Dumfries. At the trial the respondent appeared personally and argued that he should be acquitted because a notice of intended prosecution had not been served on him in terms of section 1 of the Road Traffic (Offenders) Act 1988 as amended. Having heard submissions on this matter (which is the only live issue in the case) the Justices agreed with the respondent, and on that basis acquitted him of the charge. It is against that decision that the appellant now appeals by way of stated case.

[3] Section 1 of the Road Traffic (Offenders)Act 1988 as amended by the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994, Schedule 9, paragraph 6(3) provides as follows:

(1) Subject to section 2 of this Act, a person shall not be convicted of an offence to which this section applies unless -

(a) he was warned at the time the offence was committed that the question of prosecuting him for some one or other of the offences to which this section applies would be taken into consideration, or

(b) within fourteen days of the commission of the offence a summons (or, in Scotland, a complaint) for the offence was served on him, or

(c) within fourteen days of the commission of the offence a notice of the intended prosecution specifying the nature of the alleged offence and the time and place where it is alleged to have been committed, was -

(i) in the case of an offence under section 28 or 29 of the Road Traffic Act 1988 (cycling offences), served on him,

(ii) in the case of any other offence, served on him or on the person, if any, registered as the keeper of the vehicle at the time of the commission of the offence.

(1A) A notice required by this section to be served on any person may be served on that person -

(a) by delivering it to him;

(b) by addressing it to him and leaving it at his last known address; or

(c) by sending it by registered post, recorded delivery service or first class post addressed to him at his last known address.

(2) A notice shall be deemed for the purposes of sub-section (1)(c) above to have been served on a person if it was sent by registered post or recorded delivery service addressed to him at his last known address, notwithstanding that the notice was returned as undelivered or was for any other reason not received by him.

(3) The requirement of sub-section (1) shall in every case be deemed to have been complied with unless and until the contrary is proved.

...

[4] Against that statutory background, the Justices concluded that it was not enough for the appellant to show that the notice had been sent out by registered post or recorded delivery. They accepted that the respondent had not received the notice of intended prosecution. They therefore concluded that service had not been effected. They relied upon the terms of section 1(3) above which provides that the requirement of service shall in every case be deemed to have been complied with unless and until the contrary is proved. As they were satisfied that the respondent had not received the notice, he had thereby proved that service had not been effected in terms of section 1(1)(c)(ii).

[5] While that reading of the relevant statutory provision is understandable, we are satisfied that it is incorrect. In terms of section 1A, service of the necessary notice in terms of section 1(1)(c)(ii) is achieved by one of three specific methods. Firstly, service may be affected by personal delivery; secondly, by addressing the notice to the recipient and leaving it at his last known address; and thirdly, by sending the notice by registered post, recorded delivery service or first class post addressed to the last known address. It is only in respect of the first two of these methods of service that provision is made for delivery of the notice. In respect of the third form of service in terms of section (1A)(c) (which was adopted in the present case), service is achieved, and the requirement of warning of prosecution satisfied, by the simple expedient of sending out the notice. Once the notice has been sent, the statutory requirement imposed on the Crown to issue warning of prosecution in terms of the sub-section is achieved. No regard is to be had, in our view, as to whether the notice was received. This is perhaps reinforced by the terms of section 1(2) which provides that a notice will be deemed to have been served on the person notwithstanding that the notice was returned as undelivered or was for any other reason not received by him.

[6] This reading of the section then informs the proper interpretation of section 1(3), which provides that the requirement of sub-section 1(1) shall be deemed to be complied with unless and until the contrary is proved. What is deemed to have happened is that the notice has been served on the person concerned, in the sense that the notice has been sent to him. As the section specifically makes no reference to the notice having to be received, there is no question of any presumption that such receipt has taken place. Accordingly, the reference in section 1(3) that the requirements of section 1(1) are deemed to have been complied with unless and until the contrary is proved refers only to the proof of sending the notice and not to its delivery. The error in the respondent's approach therefore, as reflected in the Justices' decision, was to assume that if he showed that he had not received the notice, he had thereby proved therefore that service had not been effective. (We note that the deeming provision in section 1(2) does not include the situation where the notice is served by first class post). The presumption in section 1(3) which is subject to the proviso that the contrary might be proved, refers only to disproving that the notice was sent. Once proof of sending is established, there is an irrebuttable presumption that service has been effected.

[7] This reading of the statutory provisions, which reflects the submissions of the Advocate Depute at the appeal, is enough to dispose of the appeal. We also agree with the Advocate Depute that the cases of Sanders v Scott [1961] 2 Q.B. 326 and Archer v Blacker [1965] Crim L.R. 165 were not really relevant and were in any event concerned with an earlier and different version of the Act. We would not be prepared to agree, however, that as the warning of intended prosecution is merely a formal requirement placed on the prosecution, then failure to observe it is not important. In our view, the terms of the section are plain; if service as we have described it is not properly effected in terms of the relevant provisions, then no conviction will follow.

[8] We are therefore also unable to agree with the clear and careful submissions put forward by the respondent (who appeared for himself) that the requirement for sending out a warning notice in these circumstances was somewhat pointless if there was no provision for such notices being received by the recipient, and that in the circumstances in which he found himself, common sense would suggest that some remedy should have been made available to him. While we have a measure of sympathy for this submission, particularly as we consider that he has conducted himself responsibly throughout this protracted case, and also because the terms of the relevant statutory provisions are somewhat peremptory and are not immediately clear, we nonetheless require to answer the first question in the Stated Case in the affirmative, and the second question in the negative, and remit the case back to the Justices to convict the respondent, and to proceed as accords.

 

 


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