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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 >> Bakewell, R. v [2006] EWCA Crim 2 (11 January 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2006/2.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Crim 2 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS CROWN COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BENSON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE BELL
and
SIR JOHN ALLIOTT
____________________
Regina |
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- and - |
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Russell Joseph Bakewell |
Appellant/ Defendant |
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Mr Alistair MacDonald QC & Ms Gillian Batts for the Appellant
Hearing date : 12 October 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
This is the judgment of the court :
"1. I was approached by a male I know as John at a plant auction at Ferrybridge.
2. John and I agreed to import a container from Dubai. My understanding was that the container would be used to import a quantity of tyres and cigarettes.
3. I agreed to allow my details to be used by John. My name and address appears on the shipping documentation. I made arrangements with Rutland Worldwide Freight in the United Kingdom. I had no input into events in Dubai.
4. For allowing my details to be used and facilitating the importation of cigarettes I was to receive the tyres free of charge. [This was the extent of my benefit.]
5. The cigarettes remained John's property throughout. I was not involved in the distribution of the cigarettes. I was not going to receive any profit from the sale of the cigarettes."
"Of course there was in the case of Ellingham a basis of plea and so I have had to look and see whether the facts of this case can be distinguished from those in Ellingham. I have decided on balance that they can…Mr Ellingham took a much more controlling part in the importation, in my judgment, than did Mr Bakewell, because like Mr Bakewell he arranged with the freight forwarders to have the consignment delivered to a particular address, but that address was his own premises of which he had complete physical control. Not only that, he employed specifically for the purpose two young men to unload the consignment that contained the contraband cigarettes. That is distinguishable in some measure, and in my judgment a significant measure, from the role played by Mr Bakewell in this case…[E]ach case turns particularly on its own facts and here it seems to me that I cannot say in reality that the benefit to Mr Bakewell could be calculated either at the value of the cigarettes as part of the consignment or at the pecuniary advantage derived from the evasion of duty. It seems to me that his role was one step back from that of Mr Ellingham in that case, and so it seems to me that justice demands that the measurement of the benefit should be the estimate of the value of the tyres, which was £10,000."
POCA
"(4) The court must proceed as follows –
(a) it must decide whether the defendant has a criminal lifestyle;
(b) if it decides that he has a criminal lifestyle it must decide whether he has benefited from his general criminal conduct;
(c) if it decides that he does not have a criminal lifestyle it must decide whether he has benefited from his particular criminal conduct.
(5) If the court decides under subsection (4)(b) or (c) that the defendant has benefited from the conduct referred to it must –
(a) decide the recoverable amount, and
(b) make an order (a confiscation order) requiring him to pay that amount.
(6) But the court must treat the duty in subsection (5) as a power if it believes that any victim of the conduct has at any time started or intends to start proceedings against the defendant in respect of loss, injury or damage sustained in connection with the conduct."
"(1) The recoverable amount for the purposes of section 6 is an amount equal to the defendant's benefit from the conduct concerned.
(2) But if the defendant shows that the available amount is less than the benefit the recoverable amount is –
(a) the available amount, or
(b) a nominal amount, if the available amount is nil.
(3) But if section 6(6) applies the recoverable amount is such amount as –
(a) the court believes is just, but
(b) does not exceed the amount found under subsection (1) or (2) (as the case may be).
"(3) Particular criminal conduct of the defendant is all his criminal conduct which falls within the following paragraphs –
(a) conduct which constitutes the offence or offences concerned…
(4) A person benefits from the conduct if he obtains property as a result of or in connection with the conduct.
(5) If a person obtains a pecuniary advantage as a result of or in connection with conduct, he is to be taken to obtain as a result of or in connection with the conduct a sum of money equal to the value of the pecuniary advantage."
The submissions
HMRC's case at the Crown Court
"it seems to me that it would be wholly inappropriate to accede to the Crown's submissions that because the matter wasn't put fully before me on the previous occasion I should now revisit it and take an action which would increase the confiscation order of £10,000 by a sum in excess of £400,000. It seems to me that that would never be an appropriate basis for operating the power that I have under section 155, and that to do so would be oppressive…"
The authorities
"26. If, then, the value of property obtained as a result of or in connection with the commission of an offence is simply the value of the property to the offender when he obtained it, even if it is subsequently destroyed, damaged or forfeited, one would expect the same general approach to apply in the case of a pecuniary advantage. And indeed subsections (4) and (5) of section 71 of the 1988 Act produce that result…
27. That being so, the fact that the respondent and his co-accused were unable to realise the value of the contraband cigarettes is irrelevant to the question whether they derived a pecuniary advantage from fraudulently evading the excise duty on them. If the cigarettes had not been seized and the respondent and his co-accused had been able to sell them, then the money which they received from selling them would have been "property" in terms of section 71(4). In that situation they would not only have derived a pecuniary advantage in terms of section 71(5) from evading the duty but would also have obtained property in terms of section 71(4) in the form of the sale receipts. Their benefit from the commission of the offence would have been made up of these two elements.
28. Mr Emmerson sought to support the approach of the Court of Appeal to the application of section 71(5) by arguing that the question of whether an offender had derived a pecuniary advantage from his offence was a question of fact, to be determined in the particular circumstances of each case. In some cases – for example, where the contraband goods were sold – the position would be clear. The same might apply where someone smuggled in a Cartier watch and subsequently wore it for some months. In this case, however, where the customs officers had forfeited the cigarettes as soon as the boat reached Goole, it was impossible to say that the respondent had derived any pecuniary advantage whatever from evading the duty. Apart from all the other difficulties, this approach introduces a degree of uncertainty that is out of place in the application of a penal provision of this kind. This was highlighted by counsel's understandable reluctance to indicate how long the respondent would have had to have the cigarettes after evading payment of the duty before he could be said to have derived a pecuniary advantage from his offence. Would a day have been enough? Or a week? The test to be applied in answering such a question is altogether too obscure. For this reason alone, the approach advocated by Mr Emmerson would be unworkable and must be rejected.
29. I am accordingly satisfied that the decision of the Court of Appeal on this point was wrong. It is worth adding that, if adopted, their interpretation would go a long way to making the confiscation provisions ineffective against smugglers. After all, there will be few, if any, cases where the customs officers will fail to seize contraband goods which they find in the hands of smugglers. The decision of the Court of Appeal would mean that in any such case, for the purposes of section 71(5), the smugglers would derive no pecuniary benefit from evading the excise duty and so no confiscation order could be made against them. Fortunately, the terms of the legislation do not lead to that result."
"It is thus apparent that the learned judge put to one side in this context the agreed basis of plea and, in particular, the acknowledgment of the Crown that the appellant had no previous involvement in drug trafficking."
"No doubt one could envisage circumstances where the Crown has discovered prior to the conclusion of a confiscation hearing that such a concession has been wrongly made. Further information may have come to light which demonstrates this to have been the case. In such circumstances, the appropriate course would be for the Crown to notify the defendant that the concession has been withdrawn and that, accordingly, he will have the choice of proving on the balance of probabilities that he was, after all, a first-time offender, or of inviting the court to be satisfied that there would be a serious risk of injustice, for some other reason, if the statutory assumption were to be applied. What is plainly unacceptable is for the concession to be made part of the sentencing process, without qualification, but for reliance to be placed, tacitly, on the assumptions when it comes to the confiscation hearing."
"It was the appellant who was responsible for the importation and storage of the goods, whatever reward he might eventually have been expecting, and, in our judgment he derived a pecuniary advantage within the meaning of the subsection upon the importation. We follow the reasoning of Lord Rodger, in Smith."
Conclusion