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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Chief Constable, Northern Constabulary v. Tough [2006] ScotSC 16 (10 March 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2006/16.html
Cite as: [2006] ScotSC 16

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SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT INVERNESS

 

B64/05

JUDGEMENT

 

of

 

SHERIFF PRINCIPAL SIR STEPHEN S T YOUNG Bt QC

 

in the cause

 

THE CHIEF CONSTABLE, NORTHERN CONSTABULARY

 

Pursuer and Appellant

 

against

 

GRAEME MACPHERSON TOUGH

 

Defender and Respondent

 

 

 

 

 

Act: Ms Leslie Johstone, solicitor, The Highland Council, Inverness

Alt: Ms Elaine Young, solicitor, The Mackenzie Law Practice, Inverness

 

 

Inverness: 10th March 2006

 

The sheriff principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, refuses the appeal and adheres to the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 19 July 2005; finds the pursuer and appellant liable to the defender and respondent in the expenses of the appeal and allows an account thereof to be given in and remits the same, when lodged, to the auditor of court to tax and to report; quoad ultra remits the cause to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Note

 

[1] The sheriff has set out the background to this matter in the full and careful note which he appended to his interlocutor dated 19 July 2005. In this situation I think that it is unnecessary that I should myself set out the background.

 

[2] In terms of the interlocutor which is the subject of this appeal the sheriff made an interim sexual offences prevention order against the defender. This he did in terms of section 109(3) of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 which provides: "The court may, if it considers it just to do so, make an interim sexual offences prevention order, prohibiting the (defender) from doing anything described in the order". It is evident from the terms of this sub-section that the sheriff had a discretion whether or not to make an interim sexual offences prevention order, and it is well established that a court of appeal may only interfere with the decision of a court of instance made in the exercise of a discretion where, broadly, the court of first instance has erred in law, misunderstood or misused the evidence or the material facts before it, taken into account an irrelevant consideration or failed to take into account a relevant consideration or reached a decision which may be categorised, for example, as "plainly wrong", "manifestly inequitable" or "unreasonable" - see Macphail's Sheriff Court Practice (2nd Edn) at paragraphs 18.110/1.

 

[3] In his note of appeal the pursuer originally proposed eight grounds of appeal. But in the course of the hearing of the appeal his solicitor indicated that she no longer insisted on grounds 1, 2, 3 and 7. She also stated that she relied only upon errors of law on the part of the sheriff as a basis upon which I might interfere with the decision made by the sheriff in the exercise of his discretion.

 

[4] Grounds 4 and 5 in the note of appeal both refer to a passage on page 9 of the sheriff's note where, referring to an interim sexual offences prevention order, he wrote:

 

It also seems to me that as the order restricts the free movement of the defender, the court should be slow to grant any order which is more than the minimum required to achieve the exact purpose sought by the chief constable and that he should be in a position from the outset to explain clearly the exact purpose he wishes to achieve and the exact mischief he wishes to prevent. That, in my opinion, is a necessary part of the definition of "just" in section 109(3).

 

[5] In ground of appeal 4 it is said that the sheriff erred in law in this passage by suggesting that the minimum intervention principle applied to the Sexual Offences Act 2003. Reference is made to section 107(2) which provides: "The only prohibitions that may be included in the order are those necessary for the purpose of protecting the public or any particular members of the public from serious sexual harm from the (defender)". It is pointed out that there is no reference in this sub-section to a condition (presumably what is meant here is a prohibition) being the minimum required.

 

[6] In ground of appeal 5 it is again said that the sheriff erred in law in the same passage on page 9. It is said:

 

The word "just" in that section refers to whether, in all the circumstances, an interim order should be granted. It is concerned with the usual considerations applying to the grant of an interim order and would, for example, require that a prima facie case has been made. Once the sheriff has decided that it is just to grant an interim order he then has to consider whether the conditions are necessary to protect the public from serious sexual harm. The pursuer had made a prima facie case that an order should be granted.

 

[7] I confess that I did not find the submissions of the pursuer's solicitor always easy to follow. Referring to grounds of appeal 4 and 5, she essentially repeated what had been stated in these grounds of appeal, and I did not understand her to be advancing any other point of significance in relation to these two grounds.

 

[8] Section 105(3) provides, in the context of this case, that the sheriff may make a sexual offences prevention order where satisfied "(a) that the person's behaviour since the conviction or finding makes it necessary to make such an order, for the purposes of protecting the public or any particular members of the public from serious sexual harm from the (defender)". The meaning of the expression "protecting the public or any particular members of the public from serious sexual harm from the (defender)" is explained in section 106(3) where it is provided that this expression "means protecting the public in the United Kingdom or any particular members of that public from serious physical or psychological harm, caused by the (defender) committing one or more offences listed in schedule 3". I have already quoted sections 107(2) and 109(3) and in light of this statutory framework I am quite unable to detect any error of law on the part of the sheriff in the passage on page 9 of his note to which the pursuer has taken exception.

 

[9] Ground of appeal 6 refers to a passage on page 10 of the sheriff's note where he wrote:

 

It is obvious that there is a substantial difference between offences of exposure to middle aged women and having sex with a child. That, however, does not, in my opinion, prevent the court granting the order sought; all that the Act requires is that the defender commit an offence as defined and that he commit another offence as defined - the offences do not need to be of the same kind, other than being included in the list of offences in paragraph 60 of schedule 3.

 

[10] In ground of appeal 6 it is said that the sheriff erred in law in this passage in that:

 

he states in his reasoning that all the Act requires is that the defender committed an offence as defined and that he committed another offence as defined. Section 105(3)(a) of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 states that the sheriff may make an order where satisfied that the person's behaviour since the conviction or finding makes it necessary to make such an order for the purposes of protecting the public or any particular members of the public from serious sexual harm from persons such as the defender.

 

[11] In support of this ground of appeal the pursuer's solicitor submitted that the Act did not require that the defender should have committed a further offence (following, so I understood her, an initial offence as specified in section 105(1)(a)(i) of the Act) but that the defender's behaviour, even if it fell below that required to constitute a criminal offence, should justify the making of an order.

 

[12] It is I think fair to say that this particular passage in the sheriff's note is not perhaps expressed as happily as it might have been. When I first read it I thought that what the sheriff was perhaps saying was that, before an interim sexual offences prevention order could be made, it was necessary that the defender should have committed at least two offences from among those listed in paragraph 60, one after the other. If this is indeed what he meant, then it respectfully seems to me that he erred in law since I do not see any requirement in the relevant sections of the Act to the effect that an interim sexual offences prevention order may only be pronounced where two such offences have been committed. It may be that what the sheriff had in mind here was the definition in section 106(3) of the expression "protecting the public or any particular members of the public from serious sexual harm from the (defender)". In short, this means protecting the public from serious harm "caused by the (defender) committing one or more offences listed in schedule 3". It occurs to me that in this passage, when he spoke of the defender committing "another offence as defined", the sheriff had in mind section 106(3). But, if this is correct, then again in my opinion he fell into error in stating that "the offences do not need to be of the same kind, other than being included in the list of offences in paragraph 60 of schedule 3" since, while the offence referred to in section 105(1)(a)(i) must be one listed in paragraph 60 of schedule 3, for the purposes of section 106(3) an offence merely requires to be listed in schedule 3, and is not restricted to one listed in paragraph 60 of this schedule.

 

[13] Ground of appeal 8 is in the following terms:

 

The sheriff has erred in law by considering the effect of the conditions sought on the defender rather than whether it is necessary to protect the public or particular members of the public from serious sexual harm. On page 15 of (his) note the sheriff states that conditions 8, 9 and 10 are unduly "onerous". The test contained in section 107 of the said Act is not whether the condition is unduly onerous but whether it is necessary.

 

[14] Referring to this ground of appeal, the pursuer's solicitor drew attention to a passage on page 15 of the sheriff's note where he stated:

 

As regards the eighth condition, the pursuer's solicitor said that it was justified by the defender's conduct, which resulted in the convictions for public indecency and breach of the peace. In my opinion, this condition is unduly onerous. I accept that the defender's modus operandum for offences of public indecency are likely to involve the use of quiet areas of the countryside, but as I have already said it is not inherent in such conduct that it is likely to cause serious physical or psychological harm to his victims. There is no suggestion that the defender's behaviour towards young girls involves the use of secluded areas. I shall vary the order by excluding this condition.

 

[15] In part 8 (as amended) of his first crave the pursuer sought an order against the defender prohibiting him, for a period of not less than five years, from entering any woodland, forest, including any path which passes through such areas, other than for the purpose of undertaking work on a Community Service Order under supervision of a Highland Council employee.

 

[16] In this context the pursuer's solicitor essentially repeated what had been said in ground of appeal 8, namely that the sheriff had erred in considering part 8 of the pursuer's first crave from the defender's viewpoint, the correct test being, not whether the prohibition sought by the pursuer was unduly onerous, but whether it was necessary.

 

[17] I am not persuaded that the sheriff fell into error in the passage on page 15 of his note to which the pursuer has taken exception. In terms of section 109(3) the sheriff had a discretion whether or not to make an interim sexual offences prevention order if he considered it "just to do so". It seems to me that the sheriff's description of part 8 of the pursuer's first crave as "unduly onerous" is no more than an aspect of his consideration whether or not it would be just to grant an interim order and, for the rest, essentially what I think he was saying in this passage is that he did not consider that part 8 of the pursuer's first crave was necessary to protect the public or any particular members of the public (and specifically girls under the age of 16 years) from serious physical or psychological harm. As a matter of law this was a conclusion which in my opinion he was perfectly entitled to reach.

 

[18] There remains the question what should be the effect upon the outcome of this appeal of my conclusion that the sheriff erred in law in the passage which I have quoted from page 10 of his note. As is pointed out in Macphail at paragraph 18.110, "The appellate court's function is initially one of appeal only. It may set aside the judge's exercise of his discretion only for certain reasons, which are about to be discussed, and it is only if and after it has reached the conclusion that the judge's exercise of his discretion must be set aside for one or other of those reasons that the appellate court becomes entitled to exercise an independent discretion of its own". But it is one thing to say that an appellate court may exercise an independent discretion of its own, and another thing to say that it should do so when no reasons have been advanced by the appellant to demonstrate why the conclusion to be reached by the appellate court should differ from that reached by the court of first instance. In the present case the pursuer's solicitor submitted that I should recall the interim sexual offences prevention order which had been granted by the sheriff in terms of his interlocutor dated 19 July 2005 and in its place grant an interim sexual offences prevention order in terms of all ten parts of the pursuer's first crave subject to the amendments which had previously been allowed in terms of the interlocutors dated 14 April and 19 July 2005. She submitted that the pursuer had made out a prima facie case to the effect that there was a need to protect the community, or particular members of the community, from serious physical or psychological harm in that the nature of the defender's offending and his behaviour since his conviction in September 2004 had been such as to give reasonable cause to believe that it was necessary for an order to be made in terms of all ten parts of the pursuer's first crave as amended.

 

[19] The difficulty I have in giving effect to this submission is that nothing was said by the pursuer's solicitor to indicate why an interim order in terms of all ten parts of the pursuer's crave as amended was to be preferred to the interim order which the sheriff in fact granted in terms of his interlocutor dated 19 July 2005. Thus she did not seek to address separately the merits or otherwise of each of these ten parts. It does not follow from the mere fact that the sheriff erred in law in the single respect which I have identified that I should exercise my discretion on appeal to recall the interim order which he granted and in its place substitute an interim order in the terms sought by the pursuer. As is said in Macphail at paragraph 18.100, "On an appeal from the sheriff principal or the sheriff, the appellate court, whether it is the Inner House or the sheriff principal, regards the interlocutor complained of as a valid and correct judgement which must remain so until the appellant shows cause why it should be altered". This the pursuer's solicitor did not do. I have accordingly refused the appeal.

 

[20] It was not in dispute that the pursuer should be found liable to the defender for the expenses of the appeal in the event that it was unsuccessful.


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