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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Terrence Calix v Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago (Trinidad and Tobago) [2013] UKPC 15 (23 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2013/15.html Cite as: [2013] UKPC 15, [2013] 4 All ER 401, [2013] 1 WLR 3283, 35 BHRC 416, [2013] WLR 3283, [2013] WLR(D) 219 |
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[2013] UKPC 15
Privy Council Appeal No 0003 of 2012
JUDGMENT
Terrence Calix (Appellant) v Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago (Respondent)
From the Court of Appeal of the Republic of Trinidad & Tobago
before
Lord Hope
Lord Kerr
Lord Wilson
Lord Reed
Sir John Sheil (NI)
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
LORD KERR
ON
23 MAY 2013
Heard on 14 March 2013
Appellant Anand Beharrylal Frances Ridout Taurean Dassyne (Instructed by Shearman Bowen & Co Solicitors) |
Respondent Thomas Roe (Instructed by Charles Russell LLP) |
LORD KERR
Introduction
The malicious prosecution proceedings
"The plaintiff remained on remand for an additional 115 days or just under four months pending the determination of the rape charge. I assessed his general damages at $38,000. In arriving at this figure I took into account the peculiar character and reputation of the plaintiff in 1998. He had been living as a homeless person in an abandoned shed, in an environment that was unhygienic and squalid. He had no toilet facilities, running water, or electricity. He refused contact with his sister who lived in premises in San Juan, and was not willing to call upon any friend or acquaintance when arrested. Notwithstanding his high school education and his training at John Donaldson Technical Institute as a machinist, he deliberately withdrew from society and the labour force at a time when employment and a better way of life was readily available. He might have been expected to know more, to do more, and to want more for himself as a free individual, and when he was on remand. He appeared without legal representation throughout every adjournment of the robbery charge, although Legal Aid was available to him. Mr Dindial first appeared amicus for him on the first day of the robbery trial. He was a recluse, choosing to live in unhygienic conditions, ekeing out a living as a scavenger of copper, when many other options must have been available to him. I marked him as an odd man. He might have been going through an irrational or unstable phase of his life, because, with his education and training, it was unreasonable to choose to live in such squalid conditions for over eight years secluded from society. Sadly, his reputation and social standing did not amount to much. Save for some unnamed friends that also scavenged on the coast, and who he nonetheless refused to contact throughout his ordeal, he appeared to have no social contact with any person."
"The physical conditions at the police station's cell and at the remand yard could not have been worse than in the abandoned shed, and I preferred Corporal Monsegue's description of the cell to that of the plaintiff. Of course, in the cell he was deprived of his liberty. But his liberty was conditional on his bail, an avenue that might have been available with his sister's or his friends' assistance, had he chosen to contact them. The bail might have been reduced on application, but no application was made. After the dismissal of the robbery charge, on grounds certainly to be advanced at the rape trial, the magistrate or a Judge in Chambers would very likely have reduced the bail, which was originally fixed to cover both charges. His attorney made no application while the rape charge was being prosecuted."
"In evidence the only anguish that the plaintiff admitted was that the incarceration 'kind of bogged me down, it had me kind of uncomfortable'. He said his friends were 'sympathetic' to his situation after his release. Beyond these few remarks, he left his mental anxiety to be inferred by the Court. He did not say that he was shunned or treated as a pariah after his release …"
The Court of Appeal hearing
"The second head [of damages] raises the real issue as to quantum. The appellant was incarcerated up to the time of the dismissal of the rape charge some 115 days after the robbery charge was dismissed. He contends that an award of $38,000 for this period is inordinately low. I do not agree. The issue which arises here is whether a person who is incarcerated, although granted bail, can receive an award of damages in malicious prosecution under the head of endangerment of liberty. The issue is an important one and we are told that this is the first occasion on which it falls to be decided by the Court of Appeal. Conflicting decisions at first instance have been referred to, but in the circumstances I have come to the view that the grant of bail by the Magistrate, although not accessed by the appellant, is, in law, a sufficient ground in this case to disentitle him to an award under this head. I say so for two basic reasons. The first is that granting bail interposes a judicial act between the prosecution and the continued detention of the accused. The prosecution is no longer the cause of the deprivation of liberty. That deprivation is caused by the judicial act. Second, an award of damages here might be regarded in the circumstances of this case as inappropriate because of the failure to apply to the Magistrate, or to a Judge, for variation of the bail which, as the trial judge pointed out, was an application very likely to have succeeded. This failure was what endangered the appellant's own liberty. In the circumstances, and having regard to comparative awards, the trial judge applied the law correctly and I do not find that the award is inordinately low."
Damage to reputation
"a criminal charge involving scandal to reputation or the possible loss of life or liberty to the party charged does necessarily and naturally involve damage, and in such a case damage to reputation will be presumed."
"The seriousness of the offence for which the claimant was prosecuted should be considered. The more serious the offence, the greater the damage to the claimant's reputation. Thus, for example, accusations such as dishonesty or sexual misconduct will cause more damage than accusations of minor public order offences or assaults. A money figure should be placed on this 'reputation damage'. The award should be increased if the prosecution received wide publicity."
and
"The claimant's reputation should then be considered. If he is of good character then the 'loss of reputation' sum should not be reduced. If, on the other hand, he has previous convictions then there will be reductions in his 'loss of reputation' damages."
Loss of liberty
"It should however be clearly understood that if a defendant intends to contend that a plaintiff has failed to act reasonably to mitigate his or her damage, notice of such contention should be clearly given to the plaintiff long enough before the hearing to enable the plaintiff to prepare to meet it. If there are no pleadings, notice should be given by letter."
"Cells of dimensions of approximately 9ft x 6ft are shared by up to seven or eight prisoners. Sleeping facilities are inadequate with only one double bunk in each cell. Consequently many inmates are forced to sleep on the floor on a thin piece of worn carpet which is never cleaned or on a thin sheet if provided by relatives. Cells are poorly ventilated and are hot and [uncomfortable]. Lights may be kept on all night and this affects the inmates' ability to sleep. A single plastic pail is provided for use as a toilet by all the detainees in the cell. The pail is emptied twice a day. Shower facilities and washing sinks for the large number of prisoners on remand are also limited. Prisoners remain locked up in their cells for up to 23 hours or more and have no access to a sink or other form of running water and are forced to wash their hands or brush their teeth over the slop pail. No form of formal exercise or other recreation is provided. Access to a doctor or dentist is extremely limited. There is one prison doctor for the entire prison population at Golden Grove. Only emergency dental cases get treated. The food is of poor quality."
Appeals from compensation awards
"In order to justify reversing the trial judge on the question of the amount of damages it will generally be necessary that this court should be convinced either that the judge acted upon some wrong principle of law, or that the amount awarded was so extremely high or so very small as to make it, in the judgment of this Court, an entirely erroneous estimate of the damage to which the plaintiff is entitled."
"[T]he appellate court is not justified in substituting a figure of its own for that awarded below simply because it would have awarded a different figure if it had tried the case at first instance. … [I]t must be satisfied either that the judge, in assessing the damages, applied a wrong principle of law (as by taking into account some irrelevant factor or leaving out of account some relevant one); or, short of this, that the amount awarded is either so inordinately low or so inordinately high that it must be a wholly erroneous estimate of the damage."
Aggravated damages
Disposal