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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 >> Dosanjh & Ors v R. [2013] EWCA Crim 2366 (17 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/2366.html Cite as: [2014] 1 WLR 1780, [2014] 2 Cr App R (S) 25, [2013] EWCA Crim 2366, [2013] WLR(D) 503, [2014] WLR 1780 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Southwark Crown Court
HHJ Testar
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HAMBLEN
and
HHJ GOSS, RECORDER OF NEWCASTLE.
____________________
Sandeep Dosanjh |
1st Appellant |
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Navdeep Gill |
2nd Appellant |
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Ranjot Chahal |
3rd Appellant |
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- and - |
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R |
Respondent |
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RH Christie QC and Mr. Simon Baker for the 2nd Appellant
Mr. S Hammond for the 3rd Appellant
Mr. J Waddington for the Respondent
Hearing date : 20th November 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
The Vice President of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division
Lady Justice Hallett DBE:
Background
Grounds of Appeal against Sentence
Ground 1: wrong in principle.
i) Common law conspiracy to defraud where sentence was originally at large but which now carries a maximum of 10 years imprisonment, see s.12 of the Criminal Justice Act 1987.
ii) Common law conspiracy to cheat which was abolished by s.32(1)(a) of the Theft Act 1968 'except as regards offences relating to the public revenue'. Sentence remains at large.
iii) The fraudulent evasion of VAT contrary to s.72 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994, which carries a maximum sentence on indictment of seven years' imprisonment.
iv) A statutory fraud offence, carrying a maximum sentence of ten years' imprisonment.
"Where Parliament has defined the ingredients of an offence, perhaps stipulating what shall and shall not be a defence, and has prescribed a mode of trial and a maximum penalty, it must ordinarily be proper that conduct falling within that definition should be prosecuted for the statutory offence and not for a common law offence which may or may not provide the same defences and for which the potential penalty is unlimited. … It cannot in the ordinary way be a reason for resorting to the common law offence that the prosecutor is freed from mandatory time limits or restrictions on penalty. It must rather be assumed that Parliament imposed the restrictions which it did having considered and weighed up what the protection of the public reasonably demanded. I would not go to the length of holding that conduct may never be lawfully prosecuted as a generally-expressed common law crime where it falls within the terms of a specific statutory provision, but good practice and respect for the primacy of statute do in my judgment require that conduct falling within the terms of a specific statutory provision should be prosecuted under that provision unless there is good reason for doing otherwise."
"I consider that s.297 catches precisely the criminal conduct which is now alleged against Mr Dady. He was providing his subscribers, for a fee, with a means to get round the encryption. For present purposes, I am prepared to accept that this amounted to a conspiracy to breach s.297. In those circumstances, it seems that his offending should have been charged as such. The matters of difficulty created by s.3 of the Criminal Law Act 1977, such as the six month time limit and the need for permission from the DPP, are procedural safeguards which were plainly regarded by Parliament as important. In my judgment, it would be wrong to allow the Crown now to ignore these safeguards, and to charge what would otherwise be a precise statutory offence under the wide common law offence of conspiracy to defraud. In addition, of course, to allow the Crown to prefer this voluntary Bill would be contrary to Lord Bingham's guidance in R v Rimmington, because it would be depriving the defendant of the protection of being charged with an offence which was summary only."
"Beyond recording the position of the Crown, it is neither necessary nor desirable that this Court should comment on the scope of comment under s.69, save to say that where conduct constitutes an offence under the ordinary criminal law, it must be charged as such save in wholly exceptional circumstances. As Mr Mably rightly submitted [for the Attorney General], there can ordinarily be no justification for using s.69 in such circumstances and it would be outside the lawful exercise of the prosecutor's discretion; its use might well circumvent the statutory sentencing regime imposed by Parliament on the courts either to the detriment of the defendant by enabling a harsher sentence to be passed or to the detriment of the public interest in preventing the court passing a sentence within the range specified by Parliament and imposing ancillary orders."
"It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that it would be anomalous if the common law and statutory offences stood side by side, with no more having to be proved to establish the former than the latter, and, in the former case, without limit of penalty. We see no anomaly. In our judgment s.38(1) of the 1972 Act was a 'catch-all' provision directed specifically to punishing evasion of value added tax when that tax was newly introduced and has no bearing on the general principles of cheating in relation to the public revenue, particularly as there is no counterpart to s.38(1) in the statutory provisions relating to other taxes."
"It seems to us that the position in cases such as this, where the allegation is that many millions, not merely one million, has been lost to the country's revenues is that it is entirely appropriate for the court to approach the matter on the basis that a conspiracy to cheat is the appropriate charge and that entitles it to conclude that a sentence in excess of the statutory maximum for the single substantive offence would be available and proper. This court made it clear in Dosanjh and repeated it in Czyzewski that that was a permissible course to take. The judge in the present case was accordingly entitled, as a matter of principle, to conclude that he was not constrained by the statutory maximum for the substantive offences. He had, however, as he did, to take it into account as assisting him in coming to a conclusion as to where he should place the appropriate sentence."
"There are no sentencing guidelines applicable to this case. The guidelines for statutory offences of fraud (carrying a maximum of 10 years' imprisonment) do not extend to offences of cheating, or conspiring to cheat, the public revenue, for which the penalty is at large. Such offences are reserved for the most serious cases, where a sentence in excess of the statutory maximum for other offences may be appropriate."
Conclusions on Ground 1
Ground 2 Dosanjh: manifestly excessive
Ground 3 Gill: disparity
Ground 4 Gill: manifestly excessive
"Very substantial sums of money have been obtained in cases such as these, and were obtained in these cases. Those who organise such fraudulent activity can and should now expect, in our view, sentences well into double figures after trial."
"In our judgment the right bracket for this type of offending, with the amount of money involved in these cases, after a plea of not guilty, would have been six to eight years. That would seem to us to reflect more adequately the seriousness of the activity and the need to deter people from being involved in such activity which is temptingly easy to become involved in."
Ground 5 Chahal: manifestly excessive
Conclusions on grounds 2- 5