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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, R v [2011] EWCA Crim 102 (03 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2011/102.html Cite as: [2012] WLR 571, [2012] 1 WLR 571, [2012] Crim LR 71, [2011] 4 All ER 408, [2012] 1 Cr App R 12, [2011] EWCA Crim 102 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT HULL
MR RECORDER R MANSELL
T20090178
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SILBER
and
MRS JUSTICE SHARP DBE
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Regina |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Frederick George Thompson |
Appellant |
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Miss C Sumnall for the Respondent
Hearing date: 17 December 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thomas:
The facts and the course of the proceedings
Application for leave to appeal
The authorities on amendment to add counts subsequent to committal
"Where before a trial or at any stage of a trial it appears to the court that the indictment is defective, the court shall make such order for the amendment of the indictment as the court thinks necessary to meet the circumstances of the case, unless having regard to the merits of the case, the required amendments cannot be made without injustice."
(2) Subject as hereinafter provided no bill of indictment charging any person with an indictable offence shall be preferred unless either –
(a) the person has been committed for trial for the offence; or
…..
(ac) the person charged has been sent for trial for the offence under section 51 ….. of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998; or
(b) the bill is preferred by the direction of the Court of Criminal Appeal or a judge of the High Court ….. Provided that -
(i) where the person charged has been committed for trial, the bill of indictment against him may include, either in substitution for or in addition to counts charging the offence for which he was committed, any counts founded on facts or evidence disclosed to the magistrates' court inquiring into that offence as examining justices, being counts which may lawfully be joined in the same indictment ..."
Provision similar to (i) is made for cases sent for trial. It is then provided by subsection (3) that a bill preferred other than in accordance with (2) is liable to be quashed.
"The fact, if it be a fact, that the proposed amendment raises for the first time something not foreshadowed in the committal documents may be a potential ground for not permitting the amendment or, alternatively, only permitting it on terms as to an adjournment. It does not, however, operate as an absolute bar preventing a judge from permitting the amendment. The protection for an accused which is given by section 2 of the 1933 Act is, in effect, replaced by the judge's discretion which, of course, has to be exercised within the confines of the Indictments Act and the rules made thereunder."
"It is not necessary for us to express a view upon the question whether the obiter dicta in Osieh are inconsistent with any of the cases referred to in that paragraph in Archbold. We are not here concerned with the question in what, if any, circumstances it is permissible to amend an indictment to include a charge not foreshadowed in the committal documents."
"If the whole of any evidence relied on is entirely new, quite separate and different from the material before the Magistrates Court, as likely as not that only could only give rise to a different case altogether against a defendant, and whether by strict application of Ofori or as a matter of general fairness, in principle the court may be likely to rule that the indictment should not be amended and the Crown should, if it chose, institute separate proceedings. But if the application to amend the indictment really does no more than take forward a case already laid on the evidence, reformulating it possibly with the assistance of some additional evidence, we doubt whether that would be improper. There are two principles here: one broad, one narrow. The broad principle is that at trial a defendant should face and only face essentially the case on which he has been committed even though it may be modified one way or another. The narrow principle is that an amendment to an indictment, like any other procedural step in the law of crime, should not be allowed if it is unfair to the defendant to allow it. In our judgment the result in the present case is clear enough whether one takes a strict view as to the power to amend or a looser one."
"We think it important to note that this court in Osieh stressed the wide latitude given to the court under section 5 of the 1915 Act. It would be extremely surprising if that latitude had been impliedly limited by a subsequent Act in 1933 that addresses a somewhat different subject matter. Secondly, however, we are unable to agree with Sir John [Smith] that the views expressed in this court in Osieh were obiter. That is because it is quite clear from the structure of the judgment that, although the court thought that as a matter of fact the new counts were founded on matters that had been before the justices, it is plain that they would have decided the case in the way that they did even had that not been so. In those circumstances, if obiter at all, the authority is only obiter in a very restricted sense and, as a considered decision of a previous constitution of this court, will be followed by this court unless there are good reasons for departing from it. In our judgement, no good reason is shown."
"To do so, overlooks the true purpose of an indictment, which is to specify the charges upon which the prosecution, not the court, is seeking a conviction or convictions. It would be likely to obscure the issues between the prosecution and the defence. It would complicate the task of the jury, which until that moment, would have been considering the evidence in the light of the charges actually included in the indictment, and it would complicate the summing up. It would also open up the possibility of additional counts being based on the evidence and at the behest of a co-defendant, and in theory at least, but subject to the unfairness principle, permit an amendment to allege a more serious charge. If the width of discretion suggested in Osieh is indeed available, the circumstances in which it may be exercised will be very rare."
The issue in this case
"If they do so, then in our judgement, they are wrong."
Conclusion