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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 >> Thompson & Anor, R v [2006] EWCA Crim 2849 (22 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2006/2849.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Crim 2849, [2007] 1 WLR 1123, [2007] 2 All ER 205, [2007] 1 Cr App R 15 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
An application under section 58 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE DOBBS DBE
and
SIR CHARLES MANTELL
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Regina |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) Glyn Thompson (2) Brian Hanson |
Respondents |
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Mr Andrew Mitchell QC & Mr M Lucraft instructed by Messrs Corker Binning appeared for the 1st Respondent
Mr Philip Hackett QC & Mr Graham Brodie instructed by Messrs BCL Burton Copeland appeared for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing date: 6 October 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
This is the judgment of the court :
"2.-(1) A person who is sent for trial under section 51 of this Act on any charge or charges may, at any time –
(a) after he is served with copies of the documents containing the evidence on which the charge or charges are based; and
(b) before he is arraigned (and whether or not an indictment has been preferred against him),
apply orally or in writing to the Crown Court sitting at the place specified in the notice under subsection (7) of that section for the charge, or any of the charges, in the case to be dismissed.
(2) The judge shall dismiss a charge (and accordingly quash any count relating to it in any indictment preferred against the applicant) which is the subject of any such application if it appears to him that the evidence against the applicant would not be sufficient for a jury properly to convict him…
(6) If the charge, or any of the charges, against the applicant is dismissed –
(a) no further proceedings may be brought on the dismissed charge or charges except by means of the preferment of a voluntary bill of indictment; and
(b) unless the applicant is in custody otherwise than on the dismissed charge or charges, he shall be discharged."
The appeal procedure under the 2003 Act
"Introduction
57.- (1) In relation to a trial on indictment, the prosecution is to have the rights of appeal for which provision is made by this Part.
(2) But the prosecution is to have no right of appeal under this Part in respect of –
(a) a ruling that a jury be discharged, or
(b) a ruling from which an appeal lies to the Court of Appeal by virtue of any other enactment.
(3) An appeal under this Part is to lie to the Court of Appeal.
(4) Such an appeal may be brought only with the leave of the judge or the Court of Appeal.
General right of appeal in respect of rulings
58.-(1) This section applies where a judge makes a ruling in relation to a trial on indictment at an applicable time and the ruling relates to one or more offences included in the indictment.
(2) The prosecution may appeal in respect of the ruling in accordance with this section.
(3) The ruling is to have no effect whilst the prosecution is able to take any steps under subsection (4).
(4) The prosecution may not appeal in respect of the ruling unless –
(a) following the making of the ruling, it(i) informs the court that it intends to appeal…
(7) Where –
(a) the ruling is a ruling that there is no case to answer, and
(b) the prosecution, at the same time informs the court in accordance with subsection (4) that it intends to appeal, nominates one or more other rulings which have been made by a judge in relation to the trial on indictment at an applicable time and which relate to the offence or offences which are the subject of the appeal,
that other ruling, or those other rulings, are also to be treated as the subject of the appeal.
(8) The prosecution may not inform the court in accordance with subsection (4) that it intends to appeal, unless, at or before that time, it informs the court that it agrees that, in respect of the offence or each offence which is the subject of the appeal, the defendant in relation to that offence should be acquitted of that offence if either of the conditions mentioned in subsection (9) is fulfilled.
(9) Those conditions are –
(a) that leave to appeal to the Court of Appeal is not obtained, and
(b) that the appeal is abandoned before it is determined by the Court of Appeal…
(12) Where the prosecution has informed the court of its agreement under subsection (8) and either of the conditions mentioned in subsection (9) is fulfilled, the judge or the Court of Appeal must order that the defendant in relation to the offence or each offence concerned be acquitted of that offence.
(13) In this section "applicable time", in relation to a trial on indictment, means any time (whether before or after the commencement of the trial) before the start of the judge's summing-up to the jury…
Determination of appeal by Court of Appeal
61.-(1) In an appeal under section 58, the Court of Appeal may confirm, reverse or vary any ruling to which the appeal relates…
(3) Where the Court of Appeal confirms the ruling, it must, in respect of the offence or each offence which is the subject of the appeal, order that the defendant in relation to that offence be acquitted of that offence…
Interpretation of Part 9
74.-(1) In this Part –
…
"ruling" includes a decision, determination, direction, finding, notice, order, refusal, rejection or requirement…"
"In relation to trial on indictment"
"In relation to the jurisdiction of the Crown Court, other than its jurisdiction in matters in relation to trial on indictment, the High Court shall have all such jurisdiction to make orders of mandamus, prohibition or certiorari as the High Court possesses in relation to the jurisdiction of an inferior court."
"The clear underlying purpose of section 51 of and Schedule 3 to the 1998 Act (and for that matter section 6 of the 1987 Act and section 53 of and Schedule 6 to the 1991 Act) are to speed the criminal justice process, a purpose that Mr Perry rightly emphasised. As the court said in R (Salubi) v Bow Street Magistrates' Court [2002] 1 WLR 3073, 3083, para 16, the intention of Parliament in introducing the 1998 Act procedure was to simplify and speed the procedure of transmission of all indictable only cases against adults to the Crown Court to enable it to deal with preliminary challenges to charges of this seriousness, requiring it to dismiss the charge where, in the words of paragraph 2(2) of Schedule 3 to the 1998 Act, "the evidence against the applicant would not be sufficient for a jury properly to convict him". Thus, the argument advanced by Mr Perry, on behalf of the Crown Prosecution Service is consistent with that policy. The availability of judicial review would inject delay and uncertainty into proceedings in the Crown Court, which cannot have been the intention of Parliament. A claimant's remedies, in the event of failure of his application to dismiss, lies in the trial process, or, if he is convicted, on appeal to the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)."
"19. He submitted that in Snelgrove, the court placed considerable reliance on the delay factor and this ignored the fact that it is often the most serious matters that have delay in being listed for trial. We were reminded in written submissions of Parliament's decision to afford the prosecution a statutory right to appeal a judge's evidentiary ruling pursuant to Section 62 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003. This, it was said, will inevitably delay a criminal trial. Pausing there, it was pointed out in argument that such an appeal will not be to the Divisional Court, with possible applications to the House of Lords following, but it will be to the Court of Appeal Criminal Division. My Lord Jack J commented that he and I had dealt with an interlocutory appeal in a serious fraud case very recently…[The trial] was delayed by just one week by the appeal. The delay inherent in appeals to the Court of Appeal Criminal Division pre or during trial cannot therefore be equated with the delay inherent in judicial review proceedings…
21. Further, in his attempt to demonstrate flaws in the court's reasoning in Snelgrove, Mr Anelay argued that an application to dismiss is in fact a test of whether there should ever be an indictment within the jurisdiction of the Crown Court. Until arraignment, the Crown Court is not seized of an indictment but simply a charge sheet; applications to dismiss must be made before arraignment. He argued that the fact that the prosecution are given a specific remedy in the event that charges are dismissed, namely proceeding by way of a voluntary bill, further emphasises that Parliament intended applications to dismiss to be subject to distinct rules from trials on indictment and to form a special class of their own. If the application to dismiss is successful, we were reminded, no verdict is entered in relation to charges, unlike a trial on indictment…
22. As I have already indicated, similar arguments were considered and rejected in Snelgrove, which binds this court, unless obviously wrong. So, without further ado, I turn to the argument upon which this application is based, namely the alleged incompatibility with article 5, an issue not addressed directly in Snelgrove."
The submissions
The explanatory note
"36. Under current legislation, the defendant has a right of appeal at the end of the trial against both conviction and sentence but the prosecution has no equivalent right of appeal against an acquittal whether as a result of a jury's decision or a judge's ruling that has the effect of bringing trial to an end early. This Part introduces an interlocutory prosecution right of appeal against two categories of ruling by a Crown Court judge. The first group comprises a ruling that has the effect of terminating the trial made either at a pre trial hearing or during the trial, at any time up to the start of the judge's summing up. This includes both rulings that are terminating in themselves and those that are so fatal to the prosecution case that the prosecution proposes to treat them as terminating and, in the absence of the right of appeal, would offer no or no further evidence."
The CPS literature
"(Annex A) contains a list of examples where the judge's ruling had the effect of terminating the case. (Annex B) contains a list of cases relating to evidentiary rulings that were not fatal to the prosecution. The Government used the examples in Annex A and B, during the passage of the Bill in Parliament, to support the provisions…
The rights do not extend to a ruling that a jury be discharged, or to a ruling that can be appealed to the Court of Appeal by virtue of any other enactment…
Although the right applies to any ruling of the judge, the intention of the 2003 Act is to restrict the right of appeal to terminating rulings, such as a stay of proceedings, a ruling of no case to answer, or those that are [so?] fatal to the prosecution case that the prosecution proposes to treat them as terminating and, in the absence of a right of appeal, would offer no or no further evidence. This is because the prosecution, as a condition of informing the court that it intends to appeal, must agree that the defendant should be acquitted of the offence subject to the appeal, if leave to appeal is not obtained or the appeal abandoned before it is determined by the Court of Appeal – section 58(8)…
Quashing an indictment has the effect that the defendant may not be tried on the indictment (or a particular count, if the motion does not relate to the whole), but he is not acquitted and further proceedings may be brought for the same offence. The use of section 58 is therefore not appropriate where an indictment is quashed. The options open to the prosecution should be: to institute fresh committal proceedings; apply for a voluntary bill of indictment; or the better course to ask the judge to stay (but not quash) the defective indictment and at the same time prefer a fresh indictment correcting the error."
Discussion
Conclusion