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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Evans , R v [2004] EWCA Crim 3102 (06 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2004/3102.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Crim 3102, [2005] 1 WLR 1435, [2005] WLR 1435 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CARDIFF CROWN COURT
His Honour Judge Morris
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GRIGSON
and
THE RECORDER of MANCHESTER
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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DOROTHY GERTRUDE EVANS |
Appellant |
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Mr Huw Evans of Counsel (instructed by Messrs Hodson Parsons James and Vaux) for the Appellant
Hearing dates : 10th November 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson (giving the judgment of the court):
Introduction
"(1) A court sentencing or otherwise dealing with a person ("the defendant") convicted of an offence under section 2 or 4 may (as well as sentencing him or dealing with him in any other way) make an order under this section.
(2) The order may, for the purpose of protecting the victim of the offence, or any other person mentioned in the order, from further conduct which –
amounts to harassment, or
will cause a fear of violence,
prohibit the defendant from doing anything described in the order.
…
(4) The prosecutor, the defendant or any other person mentioned in the order may apply to the court which made the order for it to be varied or discharged by a further order.
(5) If without reasonable excuse the defendant does anything which he is prohibited from doing by an order under this section, he is guilty of an offence."
The facts
"You shall not:-
be abusive by words or actions towards Miss Margaret Jones, Mr Peter Kenyon, Mr Julian Edwards and their respective families.
enter in any way onto the property of Miss Margaret Jones, Mr Peter Kenyon or Mr Julian Edwards.
Cause any waste material to be deposited on the land of Miss Jones, Mr Kenyon or Mr Edwards."
"However, in respect of counts one and four I fear that the submission must fail. The argument has been very interesting upon each. Although these are two separate car parking incidents where the same overall conduct is alleged, there are distinctions to be drawn between these two counts. Nonetheless, at the end there seems to me to be ample video and oral evidence, sufficient to raise a prima facie case that here was a lady acting in breach of the Restraining Order without reasonable excuse and where a clear inference arises that she was intending to misuse or illtreat the recipients in each case, Mrs Edwards and Miss Jones, by conduct which it would be open to the Jury, if they see so fit, to regard as abusive in the widest application of that term. Abuse here is not to be confined simply to the utterance of words but also is, as a derivative of the verb "to abuse", capable of including illtreatment or mistreatment. It will be for the Jury to say whether it is fair and proper nowadays to regard such conduct as abusive . They may or they may not but that is their task and not mine.
Thus, in those circumstances, and for those reasons, the submission must fail on count one and count four."
"In order to establish the offence in respect of any of these four counts the Prosecution must make you sure of four essential elements. First, that the Defendant has committed an act or carried out a piece of conduct which can properly be regarded as abusive. Secondly, that if so, that it was such an act or conduct that was aimed at or was towards, perhaps, the particular named person, being one of the named persons stipulated by the Magistrates as requiring protection from harassment. That is, one of the named persons in the Restraining Order. Thirdly, that if there was an abusive act or conduct and it was conduct towards a named person, then that act or conduct was in breach of the terms of the Restraining Order. The third goes hand in glove with the first and second elements, you may consider. And, fourthly, that, in any event, such act or conduct as was committed by the Defendant was committed by her without any reasonable excuse. You will recall that I told you that Section 5(5) of the governing Act of Parliament contained the expression that if the person named as the subject of the Restraining Order committed any act or conduct without any reasonable excuse which amounted to the terms of the Order, that was an offence. So, it is necessary for the Prosecution to prove that there was no reasonable excuse for any proven act or piece of conduct which may have been abusive and aimed at or towards one of the named persons.
As to what is meant by "abusive" is entirely now for you to say. You represent the standards of right-thinking decent folk nowadays and it is for you to apply what you consider to be the appropriate contemporary meaning in modern day usage of the English language of the term "abusive". Nonetheless, obviously it is derived from the verb "to abuse". That can include, you may think, conduct such as shouting or saying foul language and offensive names at a particular person but, equally, although it is for you to say, you may find that it can also include the physical ill-treatment of a person, for example such as by striking them, or ill-treatment by neglecting them, perhaps, in the case of a child or something of that kind. But, in turn, again, I stress it being entirely for you to say, you may find that in modern parlance it is also capable of including ill-treatment generally of a person or towards a person.
As to what is meant by "towards", again, it is entirely for you to say, applying contemporary meanings of that word but, in the context of a breach of a Restraining Order alleged, you may think that it must mean conduct aimed at, in the sense of towards.
In that context it should be noted that it is not necessary for the Prosecution to establish necessarily, although it depends on your view of the facts, that any such conduct or act was directly aimed at the named person. It would be sufficient if, on the evidence, it was clear to your satisfaction so that you were sure about it, that it was conduct which was aimed ultimately at the named person even though in the first instance it may have affected a third party. Thus, in the case of the car parking count, for example, you may find although it depends upon your construction of the word "towards", that although it may be concluded that the conduct directly affected the tradesman in the first instance, it is possible for you to consider whether or not ultimately it was directed at, and therefore was towards in the appropriate construction of that word, either named person in the Order, being in count one's case Mrs Edwards and in count four's case Miss Jones. That will be entirely for you to say but, as I say, you must decide for yourselves what happened and then, having done so, decide whether any act or conduct established against Mrs Evans the Defendant can properly be construed as being abusive in modern terminology and, if so, whether it was conduct towards any person named in the Order."
The grounds of appeal
(i) the judge should have allowed the submission of no case to answer, since no reasonable jury, properly directed, could have found that the act of driving a car in the way that we have described was an abusive action within the meaning of the restraining order; and(ii) in his summing, the judge should have directed the jury that, in determining whether the appellant had a reasonable excuse for doing what she did, they should have regard to how she might reasonably have understood the terms of the restraining order.
The first of these grounds raises issues of some general importance in relation to the enforcement of restraining orders under the 1997 Act and analogous anti-social behaviour legislation.
The first ground of appeal
The justices held that his behaviour was not insulting and dismissed the information. The prosecutor's appeal was allowed by the Divisional Court, who expressed their view as to the meaning of "insulting behaviour" and held that, on the provisional findings of the justices, the offence had been established. The appeal was allowed by the House of Lords.
"The meaning of an ordinary word of the English language is not a question of law. The proper construction of a statute is a question of law. If the context shows that a word is used in an unusual sense the court will determine in other words what that unusual sense is. But here there is in my opinion no question of the word "insulting" being used in any unusual sense. It appears to me, for reasons which I shall give later, to be intended to have its ordinary meaning. It is for the tribunal which decides the case to consider, not as law but as fact, whether in the whole circumstances the words of the statute do or do not as a matter of ordinary usage of the English language cover or apply to the facts which have been proved. If it is alleged that the tribunal has reached a wrong decision then there can be a question of law but only of a limited character. The question would normally be whether their decision was unreasonable in the sense that no tribunal acquainted with the ordinary use of language could reasonably reach that decision."
"Therefore vigorous and it may be distasteful or unmannerly speech or behaviour is permitted so long as it does not go beyond any one of three limits. It must not be threatening. It must not be abusive. It must not be insulting. I see no reason why any of these should be construed as having a specially wide or a specially narrow meaning. They are all limits easily recognisable by the ordinary man. Free speech is not impaired by ruling them out. But before a man can be convicted it must be clearly shown that one or more of them has been disregarded.
We were referred to a number of dictionary meanings of "insult" such as treating with insolence or contempt or indignity or derision or dishonour or offensive disrespect. Many things otherwise unobjectionable may be said or done in an insulting way. There can be no definition. But an ordinary sensible man knows an insult when he sees or hears it."
"23. I think that these observations have been given a much wider meaning than the author intended. Lord Reid was in my opinion making two very pertinent points. First, he was drawing attention to a feature of language; namely, that many words or phrases are linguistically irreducible in the sense that any attempt to elucidate a sentence by replacing them with synonyms will change rather than explain its meaning. Lord Kilbrandon made the same point in his reference to Dr Johnson, at p 867. On the other hand, Lord Reid insisted that, whether the statute used simple words or difficult ones, its construction was a question of law.
24. Lord Reid was here making the well-known distinction between the meaning of a word, which depends upon conventions known to the ordinary speaker of English or ascertainable from a dictionary, and the meaning which the author of an utterance appears to have intended to convey by using that word in a sentence. The latter depends not only upon the conventional meanings of the words used but also upon syntax, context and background. The meaning of an English word is not a question of law because it does not in itself have any legal significance. It is the meaning to be ascribed to the intention of the notional legislator in using that word which is a statement of law. It is because of the nature of language that, in trying to ascertain the legislator's meaning, it is seldom helpful to make additions or substitutions in the actual language he has used.
25. Lord Reid's second point is made in the last sentence of the passage I have quoted, when he says that the question of whether the facts found by the tribunal count as "insulting" for the purposes of the statute is a question of fact. There is a good deal of high authority for saying that the question of whether the facts as found or admitted fall one side or the other of some conceptual line drawn by the law is a question of fact: see, for example, Edwards v Bairstow [1956] AC 14 and O'Kelly v Trusthouse Forte plc [1984] QB 90. What this means in practice is that an appellate court with jurisdiction to entertain appeals only on questions of law will not hear an appeal against such a decision unless it falls outside the bounds of reasonable judgment. "
The second ground of appeal
Conclusion