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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Commissioner of Police & Anor v Benjamin (Antigua and Barbuda) [2014] UKPC 8 (16 April 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2014/8.html Cite as: [2014] UKPC 8 |
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[2014] UKPC 8
Privy Council Appeal No 0083 of 2011
Commissioner of Police and another (Appellants) v Steadroy C. O. Benjamin (Respondent)
Appellants Douglas Mendes SC (Instructed by Charles Russell LLP) |
Respondent Alan Newman QC Sylvester Carrott Thalia Maragh (Instructed by Youngs Solicitors) |
LORD WILSON:
"(1) It shall be lawful for any person to make a complaint against any person committing an offence punishable on summary conviction unless it appears from the enactment on which the complaint is founded that any complaint for such offence shall be made only by a particular person or class of persons.
"(2) (a) It shall be lawful for any police officer to lay any information or make any complaint in the name of the Commissioner of Police and conduct any such proceedings on his behalf." (Emphasis added)
"(1) It shall be the duty of all police officers -
…
(e) to summon before a Magistrate and to prosecute persons… whom they may reasonably suspect of having committed any offence…"
"88. (1) The Director of Public Prosecutions shall, subject to section 89 of this Constitution, have power in any case in which he considers it proper to do so -
(a) to institute and undertake criminal proceedings against any person before any court (other than a court martial) in respect of any offence against any law;
(b) to take over and continue any such criminal proceedings that may have been instituted by any other person or authority;
(c) to discontinue at any stage before judgment is delivered any such criminal proceedings instituted or undertaken by himself or any other person or authority.
(2) Subject to section 89 of this Constitution, the powers conferred on the Director of Public Prosecutions by paragraph (b) and (c) of subsection (1) of this section shall be vested in him to the exclusion of any other person or authority:
Provided that, where any other person or authority has instituted criminal proceedings, nothing in this subsection shall prevent the withdrawal of those proceedings by or at the instance of that person or authority and with the leave of the court.
(3) …
(4) The functions of the Director of Public Prosecutions under subsection (1) of this section may be exercised by him in person or through other persons acting under and in accordance with his general or special instructions.
(5) Subject to section 89 of this Constitution, in the exercise of the functions vested in him by subsection (1) of this section…the Director of Public Prosecutions shall not be subject to the direction or control of any other person or authority.
89. (1) The Attorney-General may, in the case of any offence to which this section applies, give general or special directions to the Director of Public Prosecutions as to the exercise of the powers conferred upon the Director of Public Prosecutions by section 88 of this Constitution and the Director of Public Prosecutions shall act in accordance with those directions.
(2) This section applies to -
(a) offences against any law relating to -
(i) official secrets;
(ii) mutiny or incitement to mutiny; and
(b) any offence under any law relating to any right or obligation of Antigua and Barbuda under international law."
i) The advent of the Director in 1967, reaffirmed in 1981, has left the composition and command structure of the Royal Police Force, as set out in section 6 of the Police Act, unaffected. The Constitution does not make him a member of the force and he has no right of command over any part of it.
ii) Section 88(1)(a) confers power on the Director to institute any criminal proceedings in any court other than a court martial. If he exercises this power, he does so in his own name. In that it is a power rather than a duty, he can elect not to exercise it, in other words not to institute such proceedings.
iii) Section 88(1)(b) and (c) expressly recognises, as does the proviso to section 88(2), that criminal proceedings can be instituted by a person or authority other than the Director.
iv) The power conferred on the Director in section 88(1)(c) to discontinue any criminal proceedings instituted by any other person or authority at any stage, for example even on the day after their institution, raises the question which will have been in the mind of many readers of this Opinion from the outset: does the issue before the Board have any practical importance? In fact an affirmative answer, better articulated in para 27 below, can be given to that question. Meanwhile the Board notes that, even though invited to say so late in 2008, the Director has never stated whether, if the complaints against Mr Benjamin were validly laid, he would discontinue the proceedings.
v) By contrast with the express power given to the Attorney General in section 89 to control exercise of the Director's powers in relation to specified offences directly affecting the State, no express power is given to the Director in section 88 to control exercise of the powers of any other person or authority to institute criminal proceedings.
"(3) Where an enactment empowers any person or authority to do any act or thing, all such powers shall be deemed to be also given as are reasonably necessary to enable that person or authority to do that act or thing or as are incidental to the doing thereof."
"I hold it to be the duty of the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis… to enforce the law of the land. He must take steps so to post his men that crimes may be detected; and that honest citizens may go about their affairs in peace. He must decide whether or no suspected persons are to be prosecuted; and, if need be, bring the prosecution or see that it is brought. But in all these things he is not the servant of anyone, save of the law itself. No Minister of the Crown can tell him that he must, or must not, keep observation on this place or that; or that he must, or must not, prosecute this man or that one. Nor can any police authority tell him so…. He is answerable to the law and to the law alone."
"It will be recognised that the DPP remains solely responsible for the taking of all prosecutorial decisions and the police remain solely responsible for the conduct of investigations."